iHOPout by @Skthetraveler featuring @RealChampB from the group @SolaceLive a @CongoCamp production
Follow the movement on twitter @UCitent

published:01 Aug 2012

views:45

published:07 Oct 2011

views:19

While on assignment for National Geographic magazine, photographer Pascal Maitre captured footage that offers a quick glimpse into daily life on the Congo River.
Click here to see more photos from the expedition: http://proof.nationalgeographic.com/2015/09/09/surrendering-to-the-flow-of-the-congo/
PRODUCER: Shannon Sanders
VIDEOGRAPHERS: Pascal Maitre and SusanWelchman
➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe
About National Geographic:
National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and adventure. Through their world-class scientists, photographers, journalists, and filmmakers, Nat Geo gets you closer to the stories that matter and past the edge of what's possible.
Get More National Geographic:
OfficialSite: http://bit.ly/NatGeoOfficialSite
Facebook: http://bit.ly/FBNatGeo
Twitter: http://bit.ly/NatGeoTwitter
Instagram: http://bit.ly/NatGeoInsta
[Video title]
https://youtu.be/
National Geographic
https://www.youtube.com/natgeo

published:10 Sep 2015

views:25294

Hey guys!
Welcome to my channel! What’s up guys! Time for a new video and today I decided to do the Congo/Congolese tag! Get to know me and my Congolese background. If you have any questions, feel free to commen below. LOVE!
Hope you enjoy! Make sure you LIKE/SHARE and SUBSCRIBE!
Music: Fabregas - MascaraMIAMI VLOG: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rw8lO...
MADRID VLOG: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mwBiQ...
10 THINGS ABOUT LIVING ABROAD: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Skfh...
----------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------
Hey You! I'm Lynda K and I make videos about all things travel and lifestyle related! I share my tips, tricks and create videos I’m passionate about. Make yourself comfortable and enjoy!
YOU CAN ALSO FIND ME ON INSTAGRAM, COME AND SAY HI!
♡ INSTAGRAM: http://instagram.com/lyndakonde

published:12 Jan 2018

views:282

Please Subscribe to keep us going! OfficialSite: http://www.strainhunters.com http://www.greenhouseseeds.nl Facebook http://facebook.com/greenhouseseeds & http://facebook.com/strainhunters.official
Music by: Marlon Parkes aka Bobo Shanty
https://marlonparkes.wordpress.com/
Here we go again!
We board a flight from Amsterdam and in 9 hours we are in the Caribbean. After a layover of just a couple of hours on Curacao, we fly on to Jamaica. We land in Kingston around 11 am local time. The air is hot, but not too humid.
We have a 3 hours layover, so we decide to get out of the airport and go have lunch in Port Royal, half an hour away on the coast. It's a bit of a ghost-town, once a very rich merchant harbor, destroyed at the end of the seventeenth century by a powerful earthquake. It looks like it never really recoveredâ€¦
We eat lunch in a small fish-restaurant, famous for its snapper. But I eat jerk chicken because I am picky with my fish, and the jerk-spices here are amazing!
Of course we drink some Red Stripe beers, and Simon and myself decide it's time to find some weed. It does not take long before we hit the jackpot: literally on the side of the local Police station, along the seaside, there are some barracks and shacks; inside a group of Rastas is busy cleaning and chopping weed and rolling it up in small balls, using rolling papers as containers.
We ask if we can buy some, and the guys are thrilled. It's cheap, less than 1 Euro per gram. But it's a bit bitter, very leafy, and we enjoy it just because it's been a while since we smoked in Amsterdam! Some of the Rastas in the back are smoking crack cocaine in a glass pipe, the smell is terribly sour. They ask if we like some, and we politely tell them we are just here for the ganja; they nod, and scream "Jah Rastafari"!
We sit and smoke a joint with them, and chat a bit about the local weed, and the cops. It's incredible that this is all happening next to the Police station.
We leave as soon as the joint is over, and we go back to the restaurant to join the rest of the crew.
It's time to get back to the airport and catch a JamaicanAirlines flight to Montego Bay, where our local contacts are waiting. The flight is really short, under half hour, and we arrive in MoBay before sunset. Bigga, Shanti, Nampo and Taleban are waiting for us and it's great to see them again; Arjan and myself spent some crazy days with these guys not long ago, during our scouting trips on the island.
These guys are a tight crew, and they are going to take care of us during the next days of this filming trip.
Nampo is a older Rasta, wise man, with lots of contacts and very respected.
Taleban, his friend, is a grower and a smuggler, a real pirate and one of the funniest guys we ever had with us during our expeditions.
Bigga is our driver/bodyguard, he's a man of the road and he knows who and what you need to know to keep us safe.
Shanti is a local singer, a reggae artist with an amazing talent and a great personality. I know him since he was 10 years old, back in 1994, when I spent a few weeks near where he lived with his father (the man supplying me with fine herb at the time). It was really special to find Shanti during our scouting trips back in July, he's now a grown up manâ€¦ and I am getting old! Shanti will come along and make sure the soundtrack of our travels is inspiring and inspired.
We get the cars, two Toyota Fortuner, and we load up the mountain of gear we are carrying. Then we drive down to Negril in the sunset light, and when we arrive it's already dark. We decide to spend the first night at the Blue CaveCastle, a really cozy place on the rocky cliffs of Negril.
It's another true 1994-flashback for me, this is one of the places where I stayed when I was a 20-years-old ganja-traveler, already a StrainHunter without knowing itâ€¦. Of course to make the flashback even more intense the same room where I slept then is available, so I take it.
It still looks the same.
We are tired from the long travel, and we decide to go for some food. Unfortunately the chef is sick, so we decide to find something not too far away. We hit a jerk-chicken stand by the side of the road and we eat like there's no tomorrow.
After a few Red Stripes and a few joints we go back to the hotel, where we smoke some good amount of high-grade weed, and some "gum", the local finger-hash.
The weed is definitely an indica-cross, it tastes sweet and strong, and they say it's from a site not too far from where we are. We make a plan for tomorrow, and we go to sleep. Jamaica is great. It's a true privilege to be here again.
Jah Bless!
And now we are back with MisterX pics, the man is a true artist..... enjoy!
Read the live thread here: http://www.strainhunters.com/forums/topic/2820-strain-hunters-jamaica-live-thread/

Built rugged. Wears refined. Performance-stretch blazer is all about comfort and life on the road. Nylon/spandex Flexion soft shell fabric is rugged, breathable, and packable. StormRepel durable water-repellent (DWR) finish sheds moisture. Intelligent pocketing includes exclusive TripZip interior pocket for organizing boarding pass, passport, phone, and other essentials, and features a zip compartment with media port. Refined cut and drape take you easily from casual day excursions to dinners out.

published:08 Jan 2018

views:2088

published:01 Sep 2014

views:8648

I backpacked through Africa by myself and loved it! I went through 13 countries (South Africa, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Malawi, Tanzania, Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia, Sudan, and Egypt). I definitely recommend others (even girls) to do it too.
I wrote 5 "how to" steps (including what phone to bring, $, etc) in the article, "How to Travel Africa Solo (Even as a Girl)" . Check it out here:
If you have more questions, find Backpacking Africa for Beginners on FB, like the page, and post your question.https://www.facebook.com/backpackingafricaforbeginners or even better on backpackers community at http://backpackingafricaforbeginners.com/forums/

published:19 Aug 2015

views:12385

published:03 Dec 2009

views:42

Checkout: https://overlandingshop.com for overlander and adventure traveler gear!
I was stuck between Angolan mud and Congo visas. Took three days to get out of this 175km stretch of road and this was the good stuff, it was allot of fun but very difficult. Sorry about the shaky video, all my footage was lost and this was all that was left. The road was not on google maps, just on open street maps that I installed on the Garmin.
Here are some more photos: https://www.facebook.com/pg/wheelieadventurous/photos/?tab=album&album_id=1740639446165785
Mission: Circumnavigate AfricaBike: BMWR 1200 GSAdventure
https://www.facebook.com/wheelieadventurous/
Subscribe: http://www.youtube.com/user/WheelieAdventurous?sub_confirmation=1
---------------------------------
GET SOCIAL
----------------------------------
Get more:
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/wheelieadventurous
YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/user/WheelieAdventurous

Buildings, operations and management have become increasingly sophisticated since the mid 20th century, when international airports began to provide infrastructure for international civilian flights. Detailed technical standards have been developed to ensure safety and common coding systems implemented to provide global consistency. The physical structures that serve millions of individual passengers and flights are among the most complex and interconnected in the world. By the second decade of the 21st century, there were over 1,200 international airports and almost two billion international passengers along with 50 million metric tonnes of cargo were passing through them annually.

iHOPout - The Traveler ft Champ Bass, Congo Camp

iHOPout by @Skthetraveler featuring @RealChampB from the group @SolaceLive a @CongoCamp production
Follow the movement on twitter @UCitent

4:31

DJ Rampage The Time Traveler Presents: The Congo

DJ Rampage The Time Traveler Presents: The Congo

DJ Rampage The Time Traveler Presents: The Congo

1:08

60 Seconds of Life on the Congo River | National Geographic

60 Seconds of Life on the Congo River | National Geographic

60 Seconds of Life on the Congo River | National Geographic

While on assignment for National Geographic magazine, photographer Pascal Maitre captured footage that offers a quick glimpse into daily life on the Congo River.
Click here to see more photos from the expedition: http://proof.nationalgeographic.com/2015/09/09/surrendering-to-the-flow-of-the-congo/
PRODUCER: Shannon Sanders
VIDEOGRAPHERS: Pascal Maitre and SusanWelchman
➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe
About National Geographic:
National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and adventure. Through their world-class scientists, photographers, journalists, and filmmakers, Nat Geo gets you closer to the stories that matter and past the edge of what's possible.
Get More National Geographic:
OfficialSite: http://bit.ly/NatGeoOfficialSite
Facebook: http://bit.ly/FBNatGeo
Twitter: http://bit.ly/NatGeoTwitter
Instagram: http://bit.ly/NatGeoInsta
[Video title]
https://youtu.be/
National Geographic
https://www.youtube.com/natgeo

7:21

Congo/Congolese Tag

Congo/Congolese Tag

Congo/Congolese Tag

Hey guys!
Welcome to my channel! What’s up guys! Time for a new video and today I decided to do the Congo/Congolese tag! Get to know me and my Congolese background. If you have any questions, feel free to commen below. LOVE!
Hope you enjoy! Make sure you LIKE/SHARE and SUBSCRIBE!
Music: Fabregas - MascaraMIAMI VLOG: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rw8lO...
MADRID VLOG: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mwBiQ...
10 THINGS ABOUT LIVING ABROAD: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Skfh...
----------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------
Hey You! I'm Lynda K and I make videos about all things travel and lifestyle related! I share my tips, tricks and create videos I’m passionate about. Make yourself comfortable and enjoy!
YOU CAN ALSO FIND ME ON INSTAGRAM, COME AND SAY HI!
♡ INSTAGRAM: http://instagram.com/lyndakonde

41:22

Strain Hunters Jamaica Expedition (Full Length)

Strain Hunters Jamaica Expedition (Full Length)

Strain Hunters Jamaica Expedition (Full Length)

Please Subscribe to keep us going! OfficialSite: http://www.strainhunters.com http://www.greenhouseseeds.nl Facebook http://facebook.com/greenhouseseeds & http://facebook.com/strainhunters.official
Music by: Marlon Parkes aka Bobo Shanty
https://marlonparkes.wordpress.com/
Here we go again!
We board a flight from Amsterdam and in 9 hours we are in the Caribbean. After a layover of just a couple of hours on Curacao, we fly on to Jamaica. We land in Kingston around 11 am local time. The air is hot, but not too humid.
We have a 3 hours layover, so we decide to get out of the airport and go have lunch in Port Royal, half an hour away on the coast. It's a bit of a ghost-town, once a very rich merchant harbor, destroyed at the end of the seventeenth century by a powerful earthquake. It looks like it never really recoveredâ€¦
We eat lunch in a small fish-restaurant, famous for its snapper. But I eat jerk chicken because I am picky with my fish, and the jerk-spices here are amazing!
Of course we drink some Red Stripe beers, and Simon and myself decide it's time to find some weed. It does not take long before we hit the jackpot: literally on the side of the local Police station, along the seaside, there are some barracks and shacks; inside a group of Rastas is busy cleaning and chopping weed and rolling it up in small balls, using rolling papers as containers.
We ask if we can buy some, and the guys are thrilled. It's cheap, less than 1 Euro per gram. But it's a bit bitter, very leafy, and we enjoy it just because it's been a while since we smoked in Amsterdam! Some of the Rastas in the back are smoking crack cocaine in a glass pipe, the smell is terribly sour. They ask if we like some, and we politely tell them we are just here for the ganja; they nod, and scream "Jah Rastafari"!
We sit and smoke a joint with them, and chat a bit about the local weed, and the cops. It's incredible that this is all happening next to the Police station.
We leave as soon as the joint is over, and we go back to the restaurant to join the rest of the crew.
It's time to get back to the airport and catch a JamaicanAirlines flight to Montego Bay, where our local contacts are waiting. The flight is really short, under half hour, and we arrive in MoBay before sunset. Bigga, Shanti, Nampo and Taleban are waiting for us and it's great to see them again; Arjan and myself spent some crazy days with these guys not long ago, during our scouting trips on the island.
These guys are a tight crew, and they are going to take care of us during the next days of this filming trip.
Nampo is a older Rasta, wise man, with lots of contacts and very respected.
Taleban, his friend, is a grower and a smuggler, a real pirate and one of the funniest guys we ever had with us during our expeditions.
Bigga is our driver/bodyguard, he's a man of the road and he knows who and what you need to know to keep us safe.
Shanti is a local singer, a reggae artist with an amazing talent and a great personality. I know him since he was 10 years old, back in 1994, when I spent a few weeks near where he lived with his father (the man supplying me with fine herb at the time). It was really special to find Shanti during our scouting trips back in July, he's now a grown up manâ€¦ and I am getting old! Shanti will come along and make sure the soundtrack of our travels is inspiring and inspired.
We get the cars, two Toyota Fortuner, and we load up the mountain of gear we are carrying. Then we drive down to Negril in the sunset light, and when we arrive it's already dark. We decide to spend the first night at the Blue CaveCastle, a really cozy place on the rocky cliffs of Negril.
It's another true 1994-flashback for me, this is one of the places where I stayed when I was a 20-years-old ganja-traveler, already a StrainHunter without knowing itâ€¦. Of course to make the flashback even more intense the same room where I slept then is available, so I take it.
It still looks the same.
We are tired from the long travel, and we decide to go for some food. Unfortunately the chef is sick, so we decide to find something not too far away. We hit a jerk-chicken stand by the side of the road and we eat like there's no tomorrow.
After a few Red Stripes and a few joints we go back to the hotel, where we smoke some good amount of high-grade weed, and some "gum", the local finger-hash.
The weed is definitely an indica-cross, it tastes sweet and strong, and they say it's from a site not too far from where we are. We make a plan for tomorrow, and we go to sleep. Jamaica is great. It's a true privilege to be here again.
Jah Bless!
And now we are back with MisterX pics, the man is a true artist..... enjoy!
Read the live thread here: http://www.strainhunters.com/forums/topic/2820-strain-hunters-jamaica-live-thread/

3:34

SKOOP THE TRAVELER TODAY I$ MY DAY

SKOOP THE TRAVELER TODAY I$ MY DAY

SKOOP THE TRAVELER TODAY I$ MY DAY

Men's Voyager 2.0 Travel Blazer

Built rugged. Wears refined. Performance-stretch blazer is all about comfort and life on the road. Nylon/spandex Flexion soft shell fabric is rugged, breathable, and packable. StormRepel durable water-repellent (DWR) finish sheds moisture. Intelligent pocketing includes exclusive TripZip interior pocket for organizing boarding pass, passport, phone, and other essentials, and features a zip compartment with media port. Refined cut and drape take you easily from casual day excursions to dinners out.

5:10

John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers Congo Square

John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers Congo Square

John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers Congo Square

8:17

How to Travel Africa Solo (Even as a Girl)

How to Travel Africa Solo (Even as a Girl)

How to Travel Africa Solo (Even as a Girl)

I backpacked through Africa by myself and loved it! I went through 13 countries (South Africa, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Malawi, Tanzania, Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia, Sudan, and Egypt). I definitely recommend others (even girls) to do it too.
I wrote 5 "how to" steps (including what phone to bring, $, etc) in the article, "How to Travel Africa Solo (Even as a Girl)" . Check it out here:
If you have more questions, find Backpacking Africa for Beginners on FB, like the page, and post your question.https://www.facebook.com/backpackingafricaforbeginners or even better on backpackers community at http://backpackingafricaforbeginners.com/forums/

8:50

traveler (sigiriya part 2)

traveler (sigiriya part 2)

traveler (sigiriya part 2)

1:32

Angolan African mud Adventure!

Angolan African mud Adventure!

Angolan African mud Adventure!

Checkout: https://overlandingshop.com for overlander and adventure traveler gear!
I was stuck between Angolan mud and Congo visas. Took three days to get out of this 175km stretch of road and this was the good stuff, it was allot of fun but very difficult. Sorry about the shaky video, all my footage was lost and this was all that was left. The road was not on google maps, just on open street maps that I installed on the Garmin.
Here are some more photos: https://www.facebook.com/pg/wheelieadventurous/photos/?tab=album&album_id=1740639446165785
Mission: Circumnavigate AfricaBike: BMWR 1200 GSAdventure
https://www.facebook.com/wheelieadventurous/
Subscribe: http://www.youtube.com/user/WheelieAdventurous?sub_confirmation=1
---------------------------------
GET SOCIAL
----------------------------------
Get more:
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/wheelieadventurous
YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/user/WheelieAdventurous

Christian Kiatazabu - Clip Officiel - CONGO

Gisenyi: View the Congo - Rwanda Border from the Highest Peak of the Rubavu Hills

Gisenyi: View the Congo - Rwanda Border from the Highest Peak of the Rubavu Hills

Gisenyi: View the Congo - Rwanda Border from the Highest Peak of the Rubavu Hills

When in Rwanda I got a chance to climb the Rubavu hills in Gisenyi. On making it to the highest peak I enjoyed a view only experienced by the farmers who till the hilltop. From here I saw a lot of things that are not visible from the ground. The Democratic Republic of Congo was beautifully laid out below. I could see past the Goma Airport. Settlements cover every available inch of the flat land between the hills of the region.

1:17

The Pantanal - The world's largest swamp

The Pantanal - The world's largest swamp

The Pantanal - The world's largest swamp

The Pantanal is a natural region encompassing the world's largest tropical wetland area. Located in the geographical heart of South America, the Pantanal stretches across the states of Mato Grosso and Mato Grosso do Sul and west in to both Bolivia and Paraguay, it covers an area of 75,000 square miles (195,000 sq km), making it the world’s largest wetlands. Cuiabá in the north and Campo Grande and Corumbá in the south are the main gateways to the region.
Covering an area nearly the size of the United Kingdom, the Pantanal, is made up of a collection of ecosystems that house one of the planet’s greatest variety of flora and fauna, including an immense diversity of bird and wildlife. It is thought to have the greatest concentration of animals in the Western Hemisphere and UNESCO has designated parts of the Pantanal as a World Heritage Centre.
Due to its more open vegetation, it is often easier to view wildlife and birdlife in the Pantanal than in the more dense vegetation of the Amazon region. During the rainy season, which runs from November through April, the animals and other wildlife take shelter on the higher ground as the waters rise and flood up to 80% of the plains. In May the waters start to recede, and while the land-based wildlife has more space to spread, the fish and other water born species find themselves corralled in lagoons. Large quantities of over 250 species of fish have been catalogued in the rivers and waters of the Pantanal and are a major attraction for fishermen.
Subsribe on HappyTraveler - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCB7ViK_fZPd3-3XzIgQKWYg?sub_confirmation=1

6:57

THE TRAVELER Alabaska in italy latest edo benin comedy 2007

THE TRAVELER Alabaska in italy latest edo benin comedy 2007

THE TRAVELER Alabaska in italy latest edo benin comedy 2007

Recommended for you

3:24

Time Traveler Claims He Captured This Photo Of Jesus

Time Traveler Claims He Captured This Photo Of Jesus

Time Traveler Claims He Captured This Photo Of Jesus

Time traveler claims he captured this photo of Jesus. We take a look at an alleged photo of Jesus captured by a time traveler.
FatherPellegrino Ernetti greeted Father Francois Brune one afternoon in the early 1960's. The two men had just met for the first time the day before during a ferry ride across Venice's Grand Canal. During their short conversation, Father Ernetti had said something that stuck in Father Brune's mind. The two, who were both experts on ancient languages, were talking about scriptural interpretation when Father Ernetti remarked that there existed a machine that could easily answer all their questions.
Thank you for watching!
Thank you to CO.AG for the background music!

7:41

Time Traveler Portal in Markawasi Stone Forest

Time Traveler Portal in Markawasi Stone Forest

Time Traveler Portal in Markawasi Stone Forest

Update on the woman who discovered a time traveler portal in the MarkawasiStone Forest of Peru. Why did she enter the mysterious stone cabin, and what happened next?
BrielleHunter was a professor of literature at New York University. She taught a course in 17th centurySpanish poetry. It was the inspiration of her thesis, and the source of her doctorate. But now her passion for the subject, would forever change her life.
Dr. Hunter was obsessed with the poet Clarinda. Clarinda was of Spanish descent, but she was born in South America in the Viceroyalty of Peru. Four hundred years ago, female writers were not tolerated in Spain, but restrictions were looser in the colonies, and Clarinda's writing had been published. Her only known work, "The Discourse in Praise," appeared in publication in 1608.
Naturally Brielle wanted to visit Peru, to search the state archives, in pursuit of undiscovered poems by Clarinda. She was accompanied by her girlfriend, Ramona Hedges. While they were on vacation in Peru, it was Ramona's idea, to visit the mysterious stone forest of Marcahuasi.
Markawasi is located east of Lima, on a plateau in the mountains of the Andes. It is a forest of stone pillars, hundreds of granite monuments of curious forms, resembling animal shapes, and human faces. Perhaps the fixed rock formations were the natural result of erosion. Others argue they are sculptures carved by an ancient people. On the same plain, a few pre-Columbian huts, built of stone and centuries old, are still standing.
The light of day was fading, when the sound of music drifted across the plateau, occasionally. Ramona suggested they should investigate, even if they had to use flashlights. As they neared the source of the tune, it seemed it was coming from one of the larger stone houses. The cabin's open doorway was filled with flickering light, as if illuminated by torches from within. They heard voices and laughter from inside the structure, but they had no desire to intrude, and they decided to turn back.
Then another tune could be heard, and Brielle recognized the music. It was "La Marcha Real", the royal march, which was the anthem of the Viceroyalty of Peru, in the 17th century. The doctor now found it impossible to resist the urge to join the party. She walked up to the open doorway, peering inside.
The celebrants were all men, it seemed, in various costumes of 17th century dress. Some were wearing formal white collars with frills, which was most recently in fashion four hundred years ago, among the aristocracy of Spain. Some were dancing together, as if intoxicated. They were drinking from wooden beakers, inlaid with native art, which the professor immediately recognized, as a cup used by the Inca people of that era. This was proof of the synthesis, she realized, between the cultures of the Spanish and the Incas. The early colonists drank from native mugs.
One of the men was reaching out his hand, beckoning to Brielle to come into the cabin. They wanted her to join the party! Dr. Hunter was already halfway through the door... when Ramona grabbed her by the shirt, and pulled her back, out of the cabin. It was automatic reflex, her girlfriend protested. When Ramona saw the lights go out inside the cabin, she would not allow Brielle to go in there!
Brielle insisted the light did not go out, but she was talking strangely, slurring her words. Suddenly she was unable to walk. Ramona got scared. She had to carry the professor back to their rental car. She drove straight to the front doors of the hospital in Lima.
Eventually the physicians performed a CAT scan on the woman who had been completely healthy the previous day, but today was hemiplegic. Ramona had to ask the nurse what that meant, and was quite surprised to learn, that half of Brielle's body had lost its motor function... the same half that had entered the cabin.
What if Brielle Hunter had completely entered the stone cabin? Would she have been transported back, to the Spanish colonies of Peru, in the early 1600's? Would she have been able to find the poet Clarinda alive? At least the professor is at peace with her handicap. She cannot find any reason to regret the gift she was given, when she saw those vital images from the past.
MAY I INTEREST YOU
IN SUBSCRIBING
TO THIS CHANNEL?
IT'SFREE!
CLICK HERE: http://www.youtube.com/channel/UClL9byGfuMhbJJmmi14XKwA?
sub_confirmation=1
THANK YOU,
BILL MADON

Time Travelers Among Us Now

Time travelers from the future and the past are leaving messages on the internet, at the invitation of one website, whose goal is to solve the problem of time travel.
Paranormalis dot com is an internet forum where members are invited help to solve the problem of time travel. The forum is also an open invitation to the real-life time traveler to identify himself, on the condition that he truly is a visitor from another era. Many have already come forward, but how many time travelers are on Earth right now, and who are they?
One of the time travelers who is on Earth now is John Alexanderson, who hails from the year 2043. As a former employee of IOCBH, the International Center for the Observation of Black Holes, Alexanderson followed a trail of corruption up the chain of command. He uncovered a top secret project to open a doorway into the past, by the manipulation of a miniature black hole a few atoms in diameter. He found evidence the doorway was being abused by temporal criminals. But he was discovered, so Alexanderson took flight and he ended up here. He hopes to alter our timeline to prevent the formation of the IOCBH, and its criminal cell.
Another sojourner now among us is RogerJ. R.J. is an agent of an organisation known as the Briar which operates from the year 2047. R.J.'s assignment is to locate and retrieve a temporal fugitive from the law, a fellow time agent who turned his back on the Briar, and went rogue. The temporal displacement devices they use are model number M411. This model can only be used twice, which means they each have left only one jump. If his quarry retreats further into the past, R.J. will be duty-bound to follow him, and abandon all hope of ever returning to his own time.
Gilberto1, who is from our own time, made a round trip from his house to the year 2131, returning with news from the future city of Tokyo. Across the road from his home is a large wooded lot, where he employed an EMF device normally used in the hunting of paranormal phenomena. He detected an electro-magnetic field near an oak tree, leading to his discovery of a temporal vortex. Gil traveled to the future metropolis which is the capital of Japan. There he observed two new wonders of the world. The first was a space elevator, rising one thousand kilometers into the outer atmosphere, being used to transfer men and equipment to lower earth orbit. The Japanese used the same technology in the construction of a second marvel, the Tokyo Tower of Babel. The tower is so tall that its penthouse sits above the level of the clouds.
One traveler now here is from the past, a knighted servant of King George the Fifth, of England in the year 1920. Lord HenryChatterton traveled here by means of the Chronos Velocipede, an invention for which he provided financial backing. Its name would suggest a common velocipede, the early forerunner of our modern-day bicyle, but Lord Henry explains the Latin term also translates literally into English as "the very fast time machine".
The Chronos Velocipede had been stored in a potting shed on his Lordship's estate. In a visit to the outlying building to inspect his acquisition, there came a sudden heavy rainfall. Caught by a thunderstorm, the shed was struck by lightning and he was rendered unconscious. When Chatterton awoke and the mist which surrounded him had cleared, he found himself transported in time. However he was not the inventor of the device, and did not fully understand how it worked.
When His Lordship was unable to reverse the time travel process he found himself stranded here, one hundred years into his own future. It took some time for him to learn our modern technology, and now Lord Henry is on the internet seeking the help of our physicists. These are only four of a select cadre of time travelers, currently posting on the internet forum at Paranormalis.
License links may all be found at https://creativecommons.org

iHOPout - The Traveler ft Champ Bass, Congo Camp

iHOPout by @Skthetraveler featuring @RealChampB from the group @SolaceLive a @CongoCamp production
Follow the movement on twitter @UCitent

published: 01 Aug 2012

DJ Rampage The Time Traveler Presents: The Congo

published: 07 Oct 2011

60 Seconds of Life on the Congo River | National Geographic

While on assignment for National Geographic magazine, photographer Pascal Maitre captured footage that offers a quick glimpse into daily life on the Congo River.
Click here to see more photos from the expedition: http://proof.nationalgeographic.com/2015/09/09/surrendering-to-the-flow-of-the-congo/
PRODUCER: Shannon Sanders
VIDEOGRAPHERS: Pascal Maitre and SusanWelchman
➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe
About National Geographic:
National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and adventure. Through their world-class scientists, photographers, journalists, and filmmakers, Nat Geo gets you closer to the stories that matter and past the edge of what's possible.
Get More National Geographic:
OfficialSite: http://bit.ly/NatGeoOfficialSite
Facebook...

published: 10 Sep 2015

Congo/Congolese Tag

Hey guys!
Welcome to my channel! What’s up guys! Time for a new video and today I decided to do the Congo/Congolese tag! Get to know me and my Congolese background. If you have any questions, feel free to commen below. LOVE!
Hope you enjoy! Make sure you LIKE/SHARE and SUBSCRIBE!
Music: Fabregas - MascaraMIAMI VLOG: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rw8lO...
MADRID VLOG: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mwBiQ...
10 THINGS ABOUT LIVING ABROAD: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Skfh...
----------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------
Hey You! I'm Lynda K and I make videos about all things travel and lifestyle related! I share my tips, tricks and create videos I’m passionate about. Make yourself comfortable and enjoy!
YOU CAN ALSO FIND ME...

published: 12 Jan 2018

Strain Hunters Jamaica Expedition (Full Length)

Please Subscribe to keep us going! OfficialSite: http://www.strainhunters.com http://www.greenhouseseeds.nl Facebook http://facebook.com/greenhouseseeds & http://facebook.com/strainhunters.official
Music by: Marlon Parkes aka Bobo Shanty
https://marlonparkes.wordpress.com/
Here we go again!
We board a flight from Amsterdam and in 9 hours we are in the Caribbean. After a layover of just a couple of hours on Curacao, we fly on to Jamaica. We land in Kingston around 11 am local time. The air is hot, but not too humid.
We have a 3 hours layover, so we decide to get out of the airport and go have lunch in Port Royal, half an hour away on the coast. It's a bit of a ghost-town, once a very rich merchant harbor, destroyed at the end of the seventeenth century by a powerful earthquake. It looks l...

published: 05 Jan 2014

SKOOP THE TRAVELER TODAY I$ MY DAY

Men's Voyager 2.0 Travel Blazer

Built rugged. Wears refined. Performance-stretch blazer is all about comfort and life on the road. Nylon/spandex Flexion soft shell fabric is rugged, breathable, and packable. StormRepel durable water-repellent (DWR) finish sheds moisture. Intelligent pocketing includes exclusive TripZip interior pocket for organizing boarding pass, passport, phone, and other essentials, and features a zip compartment with media port. Refined cut and drape take you easily from casual day excursions to dinners out.

published: 08 Jan 2018

John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers Congo Square

published: 01 Sep 2014

How to Travel Africa Solo (Even as a Girl)

I backpacked through Africa by myself and loved it! I went through 13 countries (South Africa, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Malawi, Tanzania, Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia, Sudan, and Egypt). I definitely recommend others (even girls) to do it too.
I wrote 5 "how to" steps (including what phone to bring, $, etc) in the article, "How to Travel Africa Solo (Even as a Girl)" . Check it out here:
If you have more questions, find Backpacking Africa for Beginners on FB, like the page, and post your question.https://www.facebook.com/backpackingafricaforbeginners or even better on backpackers community at http://backpackingafricaforbeginners.com/forums/

published: 19 Aug 2015

traveler (sigiriya part 2)

published: 03 Dec 2009

Angolan African mud Adventure!

Checkout: https://overlandingshop.com for overlander and adventure traveler gear!
I was stuck between Angolan mud and Congo visas. Took three days to get out of this 175km stretch of road and this was the good stuff, it was allot of fun but very difficult. Sorry about the shaky video, all my footage was lost and this was all that was left. The road was not on google maps, just on open street maps that I installed on the Garmin.
Here are some more photos: https://www.facebook.com/pg/wheelieadventurous/photos/?tab=album&album_id=1740639446165785
Mission: Circumnavigate AfricaBike: BMWR 1200 GSAdventure
https://www.facebook.com/wheelieadventurous/
Subscribe: http://www.youtube.com/user/WheelieAdventurous?sub_confirmation=1
---------------------------------
GET SOCIAL
--------------...

Christian Kiatazabu - Clip Officiel - CONGO

Gisenyi: View the Congo - Rwanda Border from the Highest Peak of the Rubavu Hills

When in Rwanda I got a chance to climb the Rubavu hills in Gisenyi. On making it to the highest peak I enjoyed a view only experienced by the farmers who till the hilltop. From here I saw a lot of things that are not visible from the ground. The Democratic Republic of Congo was beautifully laid out below. I could see past the Goma Airport. Settlements cover every available inch of the flat land between the hills of the region.

published: 13 Mar 2017

The Pantanal - The world's largest swamp

The Pantanal is a natural region encompassing the world's largest tropical wetland area. Located in the geographical heart of South America, the Pantanal stretches across the states of Mato Grosso and Mato Grosso do Sul and west in to both Bolivia and Paraguay, it covers an area of 75,000 square miles (195,000 sq km), making it the world’s largest wetlands. Cuiabá in the north and Campo Grande and Corumbá in the south are the main gateways to the region.
Covering an area nearly the size of the United Kingdom, the Pantanal, is made up of a collection of ecosystems that house one of the planet’s greatest variety of flora and fauna, including an immense diversity of bird and wildlife. It is thought to have the greatest concentration of animals in the Western Hemisphere and UNESCO has designa...

published: 27 Jun 2016

THE TRAVELER Alabaska in italy latest edo benin comedy 2007

Recommended for you

published: 13 Nov 2017

Time Traveler Claims He Captured This Photo Of Jesus

Time traveler claims he captured this photo of Jesus. We take a look at an alleged photo of Jesus captured by a time traveler.
FatherPellegrino Ernetti greeted Father Francois Brune one afternoon in the early 1960's. The two men had just met for the first time the day before during a ferry ride across Venice's Grand Canal. During their short conversation, Father Ernetti had said something that stuck in Father Brune's mind. The two, who were both experts on ancient languages, were talking about scriptural interpretation when Father Ernetti remarked that there existed a machine that could easily answer all their questions.
Thank you for watching!
Thank you to CO.AG for the background music!

Time Travelers Among Us Now

Time travelers from the future and the past are leaving messages on the internet, at the invitation of one website, whose goal is to solve the problem of time travel.
Paranormalis dot com is an internet forum where members are invited help to solve the problem of time travel. The forum is also an open invitation to the real-life time traveler to identify himself, on the condition that he truly is a visitor from another era. Many have already come forward, but how many time travelers are on Earth right now, and who are they?
One of the time travelers who is on Earth now is John Alexanderson, who hails from the year 2043. As a former employee of IOCBH, the International Center for the Observation of Black Holes, Alexanderson followed a trail of corruption up the chain of command. He ...

While on assignment for National Geographic magazine, photographer Pascal Maitre captured footage that offers a quick glimpse into daily life on the Congo River.
Click here to see more photos from the expedition: http://proof.nationalgeographic.com/2015/09/09/surrendering-to-the-flow-of-the-congo/
PRODUCER: Shannon Sanders
VIDEOGRAPHERS: Pascal Maitre and SusanWelchman
➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe
About National Geographic:
National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and adventure. Through their world-class scientists, photographers, journalists, and filmmakers, Nat Geo gets you closer to the stories that matter and past the edge of what's possible.
Get More National Geographic:
OfficialSite: http://bit.ly/NatGeoOfficialSite
Facebook: http://bit.ly/FBNatGeo
Twitter: http://bit.ly/NatGeoTwitter
Instagram: http://bit.ly/NatGeoInsta
[Video title]
https://youtu.be/
National Geographic
https://www.youtube.com/natgeo

While on assignment for National Geographic magazine, photographer Pascal Maitre captured footage that offers a quick glimpse into daily life on the Congo River.
Click here to see more photos from the expedition: http://proof.nationalgeographic.com/2015/09/09/surrendering-to-the-flow-of-the-congo/
PRODUCER: Shannon Sanders
VIDEOGRAPHERS: Pascal Maitre and SusanWelchman
➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe
About National Geographic:
National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and adventure. Through their world-class scientists, photographers, journalists, and filmmakers, Nat Geo gets you closer to the stories that matter and past the edge of what's possible.
Get More National Geographic:
OfficialSite: http://bit.ly/NatGeoOfficialSite
Facebook: http://bit.ly/FBNatGeo
Twitter: http://bit.ly/NatGeoTwitter
Instagram: http://bit.ly/NatGeoInsta
[Video title]
https://youtu.be/
National Geographic
https://www.youtube.com/natgeo

Hey guys!
Welcome to my channel! What’s up guys! Time for a new video and today I decided to do the Congo/Congolese tag! Get to know me and my Congolese background. If you have any questions, feel free to commen below. LOVE!
Hope you enjoy! Make sure you LIKE/SHARE and SUBSCRIBE!
Music: Fabregas - MascaraMIAMI VLOG: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rw8lO...
MADRID VLOG: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mwBiQ...
10 THINGS ABOUT LIVING ABROAD: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Skfh...
----------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------
Hey You! I'm Lynda K and I make videos about all things travel and lifestyle related! I share my tips, tricks and create videos I’m passionate about. Make yourself comfortable and enjoy!
YOU CAN ALSO FIND ME ON INSTAGRAM, COME AND SAY HI!
♡ INSTAGRAM: http://instagram.com/lyndakonde

Hey guys!
Welcome to my channel! What’s up guys! Time for a new video and today I decided to do the Congo/Congolese tag! Get to know me and my Congolese background. If you have any questions, feel free to commen below. LOVE!
Hope you enjoy! Make sure you LIKE/SHARE and SUBSCRIBE!
Music: Fabregas - MascaraMIAMI VLOG: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rw8lO...
MADRID VLOG: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mwBiQ...
10 THINGS ABOUT LIVING ABROAD: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Skfh...
----------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------
Hey You! I'm Lynda K and I make videos about all things travel and lifestyle related! I share my tips, tricks and create videos I’m passionate about. Make yourself comfortable and enjoy!
YOU CAN ALSO FIND ME ON INSTAGRAM, COME AND SAY HI!
♡ INSTAGRAM: http://instagram.com/lyndakonde

Please Subscribe to keep us going! OfficialSite: http://www.strainhunters.com http://www.greenhouseseeds.nl Facebook http://facebook.com/greenhouseseeds & http://facebook.com/strainhunters.official
Music by: Marlon Parkes aka Bobo Shanty
https://marlonparkes.wordpress.com/
Here we go again!
We board a flight from Amsterdam and in 9 hours we are in the Caribbean. After a layover of just a couple of hours on Curacao, we fly on to Jamaica. We land in Kingston around 11 am local time. The air is hot, but not too humid.
We have a 3 hours layover, so we decide to get out of the airport and go have lunch in Port Royal, half an hour away on the coast. It's a bit of a ghost-town, once a very rich merchant harbor, destroyed at the end of the seventeenth century by a powerful earthquake. It looks like it never really recoveredâ€¦
We eat lunch in a small fish-restaurant, famous for its snapper. But I eat jerk chicken because I am picky with my fish, and the jerk-spices here are amazing!
Of course we drink some Red Stripe beers, and Simon and myself decide it's time to find some weed. It does not take long before we hit the jackpot: literally on the side of the local Police station, along the seaside, there are some barracks and shacks; inside a group of Rastas is busy cleaning and chopping weed and rolling it up in small balls, using rolling papers as containers.
We ask if we can buy some, and the guys are thrilled. It's cheap, less than 1 Euro per gram. But it's a bit bitter, very leafy, and we enjoy it just because it's been a while since we smoked in Amsterdam! Some of the Rastas in the back are smoking crack cocaine in a glass pipe, the smell is terribly sour. They ask if we like some, and we politely tell them we are just here for the ganja; they nod, and scream "Jah Rastafari"!
We sit and smoke a joint with them, and chat a bit about the local weed, and the cops. It's incredible that this is all happening next to the Police station.
We leave as soon as the joint is over, and we go back to the restaurant to join the rest of the crew.
It's time to get back to the airport and catch a JamaicanAirlines flight to Montego Bay, where our local contacts are waiting. The flight is really short, under half hour, and we arrive in MoBay before sunset. Bigga, Shanti, Nampo and Taleban are waiting for us and it's great to see them again; Arjan and myself spent some crazy days with these guys not long ago, during our scouting trips on the island.
These guys are a tight crew, and they are going to take care of us during the next days of this filming trip.
Nampo is a older Rasta, wise man, with lots of contacts and very respected.
Taleban, his friend, is a grower and a smuggler, a real pirate and one of the funniest guys we ever had with us during our expeditions.
Bigga is our driver/bodyguard, he's a man of the road and he knows who and what you need to know to keep us safe.
Shanti is a local singer, a reggae artist with an amazing talent and a great personality. I know him since he was 10 years old, back in 1994, when I spent a few weeks near where he lived with his father (the man supplying me with fine herb at the time). It was really special to find Shanti during our scouting trips back in July, he's now a grown up manâ€¦ and I am getting old! Shanti will come along and make sure the soundtrack of our travels is inspiring and inspired.
We get the cars, two Toyota Fortuner, and we load up the mountain of gear we are carrying. Then we drive down to Negril in the sunset light, and when we arrive it's already dark. We decide to spend the first night at the Blue CaveCastle, a really cozy place on the rocky cliffs of Negril.
It's another true 1994-flashback for me, this is one of the places where I stayed when I was a 20-years-old ganja-traveler, already a StrainHunter without knowing itâ€¦. Of course to make the flashback even more intense the same room where I slept then is available, so I take it.
It still looks the same.
We are tired from the long travel, and we decide to go for some food. Unfortunately the chef is sick, so we decide to find something not too far away. We hit a jerk-chicken stand by the side of the road and we eat like there's no tomorrow.
After a few Red Stripes and a few joints we go back to the hotel, where we smoke some good amount of high-grade weed, and some "gum", the local finger-hash.
The weed is definitely an indica-cross, it tastes sweet and strong, and they say it's from a site not too far from where we are. We make a plan for tomorrow, and we go to sleep. Jamaica is great. It's a true privilege to be here again.
Jah Bless!
And now we are back with MisterX pics, the man is a true artist..... enjoy!
Read the live thread here: http://www.strainhunters.com/forums/topic/2820-strain-hunters-jamaica-live-thread/

Please Subscribe to keep us going! OfficialSite: http://www.strainhunters.com http://www.greenhouseseeds.nl Facebook http://facebook.com/greenhouseseeds & http://facebook.com/strainhunters.official
Music by: Marlon Parkes aka Bobo Shanty
https://marlonparkes.wordpress.com/
Here we go again!
We board a flight from Amsterdam and in 9 hours we are in the Caribbean. After a layover of just a couple of hours on Curacao, we fly on to Jamaica. We land in Kingston around 11 am local time. The air is hot, but not too humid.
We have a 3 hours layover, so we decide to get out of the airport and go have lunch in Port Royal, half an hour away on the coast. It's a bit of a ghost-town, once a very rich merchant harbor, destroyed at the end of the seventeenth century by a powerful earthquake. It looks like it never really recoveredâ€¦
We eat lunch in a small fish-restaurant, famous for its snapper. But I eat jerk chicken because I am picky with my fish, and the jerk-spices here are amazing!
Of course we drink some Red Stripe beers, and Simon and myself decide it's time to find some weed. It does not take long before we hit the jackpot: literally on the side of the local Police station, along the seaside, there are some barracks and shacks; inside a group of Rastas is busy cleaning and chopping weed and rolling it up in small balls, using rolling papers as containers.
We ask if we can buy some, and the guys are thrilled. It's cheap, less than 1 Euro per gram. But it's a bit bitter, very leafy, and we enjoy it just because it's been a while since we smoked in Amsterdam! Some of the Rastas in the back are smoking crack cocaine in a glass pipe, the smell is terribly sour. They ask if we like some, and we politely tell them we are just here for the ganja; they nod, and scream "Jah Rastafari"!
We sit and smoke a joint with them, and chat a bit about the local weed, and the cops. It's incredible that this is all happening next to the Police station.
We leave as soon as the joint is over, and we go back to the restaurant to join the rest of the crew.
It's time to get back to the airport and catch a JamaicanAirlines flight to Montego Bay, where our local contacts are waiting. The flight is really short, under half hour, and we arrive in MoBay before sunset. Bigga, Shanti, Nampo and Taleban are waiting for us and it's great to see them again; Arjan and myself spent some crazy days with these guys not long ago, during our scouting trips on the island.
These guys are a tight crew, and they are going to take care of us during the next days of this filming trip.
Nampo is a older Rasta, wise man, with lots of contacts and very respected.
Taleban, his friend, is a grower and a smuggler, a real pirate and one of the funniest guys we ever had with us during our expeditions.
Bigga is our driver/bodyguard, he's a man of the road and he knows who and what you need to know to keep us safe.
Shanti is a local singer, a reggae artist with an amazing talent and a great personality. I know him since he was 10 years old, back in 1994, when I spent a few weeks near where he lived with his father (the man supplying me with fine herb at the time). It was really special to find Shanti during our scouting trips back in July, he's now a grown up manâ€¦ and I am getting old! Shanti will come along and make sure the soundtrack of our travels is inspiring and inspired.
We get the cars, two Toyota Fortuner, and we load up the mountain of gear we are carrying. Then we drive down to Negril in the sunset light, and when we arrive it's already dark. We decide to spend the first night at the Blue CaveCastle, a really cozy place on the rocky cliffs of Negril.
It's another true 1994-flashback for me, this is one of the places where I stayed when I was a 20-years-old ganja-traveler, already a StrainHunter without knowing itâ€¦. Of course to make the flashback even more intense the same room where I slept then is available, so I take it.
It still looks the same.
We are tired from the long travel, and we decide to go for some food. Unfortunately the chef is sick, so we decide to find something not too far away. We hit a jerk-chicken stand by the side of the road and we eat like there's no tomorrow.
After a few Red Stripes and a few joints we go back to the hotel, where we smoke some good amount of high-grade weed, and some "gum", the local finger-hash.
The weed is definitely an indica-cross, it tastes sweet and strong, and they say it's from a site not too far from where we are. We make a plan for tomorrow, and we go to sleep. Jamaica is great. It's a true privilege to be here again.
Jah Bless!
And now we are back with MisterX pics, the man is a true artist..... enjoy!
Read the live thread here: http://www.strainhunters.com/forums/topic/2820-strain-hunters-jamaica-live-thread/

Men's Voyager 2.0 Travel Blazer

Built rugged. Wears refined. Performance-stretch blazer is all about comfort and life on the road. Nylon/spandex Flexion soft shell fabric is rugged, breathable...

Built rugged. Wears refined. Performance-stretch blazer is all about comfort and life on the road. Nylon/spandex Flexion soft shell fabric is rugged, breathable, and packable. StormRepel durable water-repellent (DWR) finish sheds moisture. Intelligent pocketing includes exclusive TripZip interior pocket for organizing boarding pass, passport, phone, and other essentials, and features a zip compartment with media port. Refined cut and drape take you easily from casual day excursions to dinners out.

Built rugged. Wears refined. Performance-stretch blazer is all about comfort and life on the road. Nylon/spandex Flexion soft shell fabric is rugged, breathable, and packable. StormRepel durable water-repellent (DWR) finish sheds moisture. Intelligent pocketing includes exclusive TripZip interior pocket for organizing boarding pass, passport, phone, and other essentials, and features a zip compartment with media port. Refined cut and drape take you easily from casual day excursions to dinners out.

I backpacked through Africa by myself and loved it! I went through 13 countries (South Africa, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Malawi, Tanzania, Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia, Sudan, and Egypt). I definitely recommend others (even girls) to do it too.
I wrote 5 "how to" steps (including what phone to bring, $, etc) in the article, "How to Travel Africa Solo (Even as a Girl)" . Check it out here:
If you have more questions, find Backpacking Africa for Beginners on FB, like the page, and post your question.https://www.facebook.com/backpackingafricaforbeginners or even better on backpackers community at http://backpackingafricaforbeginners.com/forums/

I backpacked through Africa by myself and loved it! I went through 13 countries (South Africa, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Malawi, Tanzania, Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia, Sudan, and Egypt). I definitely recommend others (even girls) to do it too.
I wrote 5 "how to" steps (including what phone to bring, $, etc) in the article, "How to Travel Africa Solo (Even as a Girl)" . Check it out here:
If you have more questions, find Backpacking Africa for Beginners on FB, like the page, and post your question.https://www.facebook.com/backpackingafricaforbeginners or even better on backpackers community at http://backpackingafricaforbeginners.com/forums/

Angolan African mud Adventure!

Checkout: https://overlandingshop.com for overlander and adventure traveler gear!
I was stuck between Angolan mud and Congo visas. Took three days to get out o...

Checkout: https://overlandingshop.com for overlander and adventure traveler gear!
I was stuck between Angolan mud and Congo visas. Took three days to get out of this 175km stretch of road and this was the good stuff, it was allot of fun but very difficult. Sorry about the shaky video, all my footage was lost and this was all that was left. The road was not on google maps, just on open street maps that I installed on the Garmin.
Here are some more photos: https://www.facebook.com/pg/wheelieadventurous/photos/?tab=album&album_id=1740639446165785
Mission: Circumnavigate AfricaBike: BMWR 1200 GSAdventure
https://www.facebook.com/wheelieadventurous/
Subscribe: http://www.youtube.com/user/WheelieAdventurous?sub_confirmation=1
---------------------------------
GET SOCIAL
----------------------------------
Get more:
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/wheelieadventurous
YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/user/WheelieAdventurous

Checkout: https://overlandingshop.com for overlander and adventure traveler gear!
I was stuck between Angolan mud and Congo visas. Took three days to get out of this 175km stretch of road and this was the good stuff, it was allot of fun but very difficult. Sorry about the shaky video, all my footage was lost and this was all that was left. The road was not on google maps, just on open street maps that I installed on the Garmin.
Here are some more photos: https://www.facebook.com/pg/wheelieadventurous/photos/?tab=album&album_id=1740639446165785
Mission: Circumnavigate AfricaBike: BMWR 1200 GSAdventure
https://www.facebook.com/wheelieadventurous/
Subscribe: http://www.youtube.com/user/WheelieAdventurous?sub_confirmation=1
---------------------------------
GET SOCIAL
----------------------------------
Get more:
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/wheelieadventurous
YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/user/WheelieAdventurous

When in Rwanda I got a chance to climb the Rubavu hills in Gisenyi. On making it to the highest peak I enjoyed a view only experienced by the farmers who till the hilltop. From here I saw a lot of things that are not visible from the ground. The Democratic Republic of Congo was beautifully laid out below. I could see past the Goma Airport. Settlements cover every available inch of the flat land between the hills of the region.

When in Rwanda I got a chance to climb the Rubavu hills in Gisenyi. On making it to the highest peak I enjoyed a view only experienced by the farmers who till the hilltop. From here I saw a lot of things that are not visible from the ground. The Democratic Republic of Congo was beautifully laid out below. I could see past the Goma Airport. Settlements cover every available inch of the flat land between the hills of the region.

The Pantanal - The world's largest swamp

The Pantanal is a natural region encompassing the world's largest tropical wetland area. Located in the geographical heart of South America, the Pantanal stretc...

The Pantanal is a natural region encompassing the world's largest tropical wetland area. Located in the geographical heart of South America, the Pantanal stretches across the states of Mato Grosso and Mato Grosso do Sul and west in to both Bolivia and Paraguay, it covers an area of 75,000 square miles (195,000 sq km), making it the world’s largest wetlands. Cuiabá in the north and Campo Grande and Corumbá in the south are the main gateways to the region.
Covering an area nearly the size of the United Kingdom, the Pantanal, is made up of a collection of ecosystems that house one of the planet’s greatest variety of flora and fauna, including an immense diversity of bird and wildlife. It is thought to have the greatest concentration of animals in the Western Hemisphere and UNESCO has designated parts of the Pantanal as a World Heritage Centre.
Due to its more open vegetation, it is often easier to view wildlife and birdlife in the Pantanal than in the more dense vegetation of the Amazon region. During the rainy season, which runs from November through April, the animals and other wildlife take shelter on the higher ground as the waters rise and flood up to 80% of the plains. In May the waters start to recede, and while the land-based wildlife has more space to spread, the fish and other water born species find themselves corralled in lagoons. Large quantities of over 250 species of fish have been catalogued in the rivers and waters of the Pantanal and are a major attraction for fishermen.
Subsribe on HappyTraveler - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCB7ViK_fZPd3-3XzIgQKWYg?sub_confirmation=1

The Pantanal is a natural region encompassing the world's largest tropical wetland area. Located in the geographical heart of South America, the Pantanal stretches across the states of Mato Grosso and Mato Grosso do Sul and west in to both Bolivia and Paraguay, it covers an area of 75,000 square miles (195,000 sq km), making it the world’s largest wetlands. Cuiabá in the north and Campo Grande and Corumbá in the south are the main gateways to the region.
Covering an area nearly the size of the United Kingdom, the Pantanal, is made up of a collection of ecosystems that house one of the planet’s greatest variety of flora and fauna, including an immense diversity of bird and wildlife. It is thought to have the greatest concentration of animals in the Western Hemisphere and UNESCO has designated parts of the Pantanal as a World Heritage Centre.
Due to its more open vegetation, it is often easier to view wildlife and birdlife in the Pantanal than in the more dense vegetation of the Amazon region. During the rainy season, which runs from November through April, the animals and other wildlife take shelter on the higher ground as the waters rise and flood up to 80% of the plains. In May the waters start to recede, and while the land-based wildlife has more space to spread, the fish and other water born species find themselves corralled in lagoons. Large quantities of over 250 species of fish have been catalogued in the rivers and waters of the Pantanal and are a major attraction for fishermen.
Subsribe on HappyTraveler - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCB7ViK_fZPd3-3XzIgQKWYg?sub_confirmation=1

Time traveler claims he captured this photo of Jesus. We take a look at an alleged photo of Jesus captured by a time traveler.
FatherPellegrino Ernetti greeted Father Francois Brune one afternoon in the early 1960's. The two men had just met for the first time the day before during a ferry ride across Venice's Grand Canal. During their short conversation, Father Ernetti had said something that stuck in Father Brune's mind. The two, who were both experts on ancient languages, were talking about scriptural interpretation when Father Ernetti remarked that there existed a machine that could easily answer all their questions.
Thank you for watching!
Thank you to CO.AG for the background music!

Time traveler claims he captured this photo of Jesus. We take a look at an alleged photo of Jesus captured by a time traveler.
FatherPellegrino Ernetti greeted Father Francois Brune one afternoon in the early 1960's. The two men had just met for the first time the day before during a ferry ride across Venice's Grand Canal. During their short conversation, Father Ernetti had said something that stuck in Father Brune's mind. The two, who were both experts on ancient languages, were talking about scriptural interpretation when Father Ernetti remarked that there existed a machine that could easily answer all their questions.
Thank you for watching!
Thank you to CO.AG for the background music!

Update on the woman who discovered a time traveler portal in the MarkawasiStone Forest of Peru. Why did she enter the mysterious stone cabin, and what happened next?
BrielleHunter was a professor of literature at New York University. She taught a course in 17th centurySpanish poetry. It was the inspiration of her thesis, and the source of her doctorate. But now her passion for the subject, would forever change her life.
Dr. Hunter was obsessed with the poet Clarinda. Clarinda was of Spanish descent, but she was born in South America in the Viceroyalty of Peru. Four hundred years ago, female writers were not tolerated in Spain, but restrictions were looser in the colonies, and Clarinda's writing had been published. Her only known work, "The Discourse in Praise," appeared in publication in 1608.
Naturally Brielle wanted to visit Peru, to search the state archives, in pursuit of undiscovered poems by Clarinda. She was accompanied by her girlfriend, Ramona Hedges. While they were on vacation in Peru, it was Ramona's idea, to visit the mysterious stone forest of Marcahuasi.
Markawasi is located east of Lima, on a plateau in the mountains of the Andes. It is a forest of stone pillars, hundreds of granite monuments of curious forms, resembling animal shapes, and human faces. Perhaps the fixed rock formations were the natural result of erosion. Others argue they are sculptures carved by an ancient people. On the same plain, a few pre-Columbian huts, built of stone and centuries old, are still standing.
The light of day was fading, when the sound of music drifted across the plateau, occasionally. Ramona suggested they should investigate, even if they had to use flashlights. As they neared the source of the tune, it seemed it was coming from one of the larger stone houses. The cabin's open doorway was filled with flickering light, as if illuminated by torches from within. They heard voices and laughter from inside the structure, but they had no desire to intrude, and they decided to turn back.
Then another tune could be heard, and Brielle recognized the music. It was "La Marcha Real", the royal march, which was the anthem of the Viceroyalty of Peru, in the 17th century. The doctor now found it impossible to resist the urge to join the party. She walked up to the open doorway, peering inside.
The celebrants were all men, it seemed, in various costumes of 17th century dress. Some were wearing formal white collars with frills, which was most recently in fashion four hundred years ago, among the aristocracy of Spain. Some were dancing together, as if intoxicated. They were drinking from wooden beakers, inlaid with native art, which the professor immediately recognized, as a cup used by the Inca people of that era. This was proof of the synthesis, she realized, between the cultures of the Spanish and the Incas. The early colonists drank from native mugs.
One of the men was reaching out his hand, beckoning to Brielle to come into the cabin. They wanted her to join the party! Dr. Hunter was already halfway through the door... when Ramona grabbed her by the shirt, and pulled her back, out of the cabin. It was automatic reflex, her girlfriend protested. When Ramona saw the lights go out inside the cabin, she would not allow Brielle to go in there!
Brielle insisted the light did not go out, but she was talking strangely, slurring her words. Suddenly she was unable to walk. Ramona got scared. She had to carry the professor back to their rental car. She drove straight to the front doors of the hospital in Lima.
Eventually the physicians performed a CAT scan on the woman who had been completely healthy the previous day, but today was hemiplegic. Ramona had to ask the nurse what that meant, and was quite surprised to learn, that half of Brielle's body had lost its motor function... the same half that had entered the cabin.
What if Brielle Hunter had completely entered the stone cabin? Would she have been transported back, to the Spanish colonies of Peru, in the early 1600's? Would she have been able to find the poet Clarinda alive? At least the professor is at peace with her handicap. She cannot find any reason to regret the gift she was given, when she saw those vital images from the past.
MAY I INTEREST YOU
IN SUBSCRIBING
TO THIS CHANNEL?
IT'SFREE!
CLICK HERE: http://www.youtube.com/channel/UClL9byGfuMhbJJmmi14XKwA?
sub_confirmation=1
THANK YOU,
BILL MADON

Update on the woman who discovered a time traveler portal in the MarkawasiStone Forest of Peru. Why did she enter the mysterious stone cabin, and what happened next?
BrielleHunter was a professor of literature at New York University. She taught a course in 17th centurySpanish poetry. It was the inspiration of her thesis, and the source of her doctorate. But now her passion for the subject, would forever change her life.
Dr. Hunter was obsessed with the poet Clarinda. Clarinda was of Spanish descent, but she was born in South America in the Viceroyalty of Peru. Four hundred years ago, female writers were not tolerated in Spain, but restrictions were looser in the colonies, and Clarinda's writing had been published. Her only known work, "The Discourse in Praise," appeared in publication in 1608.
Naturally Brielle wanted to visit Peru, to search the state archives, in pursuit of undiscovered poems by Clarinda. She was accompanied by her girlfriend, Ramona Hedges. While they were on vacation in Peru, it was Ramona's idea, to visit the mysterious stone forest of Marcahuasi.
Markawasi is located east of Lima, on a plateau in the mountains of the Andes. It is a forest of stone pillars, hundreds of granite monuments of curious forms, resembling animal shapes, and human faces. Perhaps the fixed rock formations were the natural result of erosion. Others argue they are sculptures carved by an ancient people. On the same plain, a few pre-Columbian huts, built of stone and centuries old, are still standing.
The light of day was fading, when the sound of music drifted across the plateau, occasionally. Ramona suggested they should investigate, even if they had to use flashlights. As they neared the source of the tune, it seemed it was coming from one of the larger stone houses. The cabin's open doorway was filled with flickering light, as if illuminated by torches from within. They heard voices and laughter from inside the structure, but they had no desire to intrude, and they decided to turn back.
Then another tune could be heard, and Brielle recognized the music. It was "La Marcha Real", the royal march, which was the anthem of the Viceroyalty of Peru, in the 17th century. The doctor now found it impossible to resist the urge to join the party. She walked up to the open doorway, peering inside.
The celebrants were all men, it seemed, in various costumes of 17th century dress. Some were wearing formal white collars with frills, which was most recently in fashion four hundred years ago, among the aristocracy of Spain. Some were dancing together, as if intoxicated. They were drinking from wooden beakers, inlaid with native art, which the professor immediately recognized, as a cup used by the Inca people of that era. This was proof of the synthesis, she realized, between the cultures of the Spanish and the Incas. The early colonists drank from native mugs.
One of the men was reaching out his hand, beckoning to Brielle to come into the cabin. They wanted her to join the party! Dr. Hunter was already halfway through the door... when Ramona grabbed her by the shirt, and pulled her back, out of the cabin. It was automatic reflex, her girlfriend protested. When Ramona saw the lights go out inside the cabin, she would not allow Brielle to go in there!
Brielle insisted the light did not go out, but she was talking strangely, slurring her words. Suddenly she was unable to walk. Ramona got scared. She had to carry the professor back to their rental car. She drove straight to the front doors of the hospital in Lima.
Eventually the physicians performed a CAT scan on the woman who had been completely healthy the previous day, but today was hemiplegic. Ramona had to ask the nurse what that meant, and was quite surprised to learn, that half of Brielle's body had lost its motor function... the same half that had entered the cabin.
What if Brielle Hunter had completely entered the stone cabin? Would she have been transported back, to the Spanish colonies of Peru, in the early 1600's? Would she have been able to find the poet Clarinda alive? At least the professor is at peace with her handicap. She cannot find any reason to regret the gift she was given, when she saw those vital images from the past.
MAY I INTEREST YOU
IN SUBSCRIBING
TO THIS CHANNEL?
IT'SFREE!
CLICK HERE: http://www.youtube.com/channel/UClL9byGfuMhbJJmmi14XKwA?
sub_confirmation=1
THANK YOU,
BILL MADON

Time Travelers Among Us Now

Time travelers from the future and the past are leaving messages on the internet, at the invitation of one website, whose goal is to solve the problem of time t...

Time travelers from the future and the past are leaving messages on the internet, at the invitation of one website, whose goal is to solve the problem of time travel.
Paranormalis dot com is an internet forum where members are invited help to solve the problem of time travel. The forum is also an open invitation to the real-life time traveler to identify himself, on the condition that he truly is a visitor from another era. Many have already come forward, but how many time travelers are on Earth right now, and who are they?
One of the time travelers who is on Earth now is John Alexanderson, who hails from the year 2043. As a former employee of IOCBH, the International Center for the Observation of Black Holes, Alexanderson followed a trail of corruption up the chain of command. He uncovered a top secret project to open a doorway into the past, by the manipulation of a miniature black hole a few atoms in diameter. He found evidence the doorway was being abused by temporal criminals. But he was discovered, so Alexanderson took flight and he ended up here. He hopes to alter our timeline to prevent the formation of the IOCBH, and its criminal cell.
Another sojourner now among us is RogerJ. R.J. is an agent of an organisation known as the Briar which operates from the year 2047. R.J.'s assignment is to locate and retrieve a temporal fugitive from the law, a fellow time agent who turned his back on the Briar, and went rogue. The temporal displacement devices they use are model number M411. This model can only be used twice, which means they each have left only one jump. If his quarry retreats further into the past, R.J. will be duty-bound to follow him, and abandon all hope of ever returning to his own time.
Gilberto1, who is from our own time, made a round trip from his house to the year 2131, returning with news from the future city of Tokyo. Across the road from his home is a large wooded lot, where he employed an EMF device normally used in the hunting of paranormal phenomena. He detected an electro-magnetic field near an oak tree, leading to his discovery of a temporal vortex. Gil traveled to the future metropolis which is the capital of Japan. There he observed two new wonders of the world. The first was a space elevator, rising one thousand kilometers into the outer atmosphere, being used to transfer men and equipment to lower earth orbit. The Japanese used the same technology in the construction of a second marvel, the Tokyo Tower of Babel. The tower is so tall that its penthouse sits above the level of the clouds.
One traveler now here is from the past, a knighted servant of King George the Fifth, of England in the year 1920. Lord HenryChatterton traveled here by means of the Chronos Velocipede, an invention for which he provided financial backing. Its name would suggest a common velocipede, the early forerunner of our modern-day bicyle, but Lord Henry explains the Latin term also translates literally into English as "the very fast time machine".
The Chronos Velocipede had been stored in a potting shed on his Lordship's estate. In a visit to the outlying building to inspect his acquisition, there came a sudden heavy rainfall. Caught by a thunderstorm, the shed was struck by lightning and he was rendered unconscious. When Chatterton awoke and the mist which surrounded him had cleared, he found himself transported in time. However he was not the inventor of the device, and did not fully understand how it worked.
When His Lordship was unable to reverse the time travel process he found himself stranded here, one hundred years into his own future. It took some time for him to learn our modern technology, and now Lord Henry is on the internet seeking the help of our physicists. These are only four of a select cadre of time travelers, currently posting on the internet forum at Paranormalis.
License links may all be found at https://creativecommons.org

Time travelers from the future and the past are leaving messages on the internet, at the invitation of one website, whose goal is to solve the problem of time travel.
Paranormalis dot com is an internet forum where members are invited help to solve the problem of time travel. The forum is also an open invitation to the real-life time traveler to identify himself, on the condition that he truly is a visitor from another era. Many have already come forward, but how many time travelers are on Earth right now, and who are they?
One of the time travelers who is on Earth now is John Alexanderson, who hails from the year 2043. As a former employee of IOCBH, the International Center for the Observation of Black Holes, Alexanderson followed a trail of corruption up the chain of command. He uncovered a top secret project to open a doorway into the past, by the manipulation of a miniature black hole a few atoms in diameter. He found evidence the doorway was being abused by temporal criminals. But he was discovered, so Alexanderson took flight and he ended up here. He hopes to alter our timeline to prevent the formation of the IOCBH, and its criminal cell.
Another sojourner now among us is RogerJ. R.J. is an agent of an organisation known as the Briar which operates from the year 2047. R.J.'s assignment is to locate and retrieve a temporal fugitive from the law, a fellow time agent who turned his back on the Briar, and went rogue. The temporal displacement devices they use are model number M411. This model can only be used twice, which means they each have left only one jump. If his quarry retreats further into the past, R.J. will be duty-bound to follow him, and abandon all hope of ever returning to his own time.
Gilberto1, who is from our own time, made a round trip from his house to the year 2131, returning with news from the future city of Tokyo. Across the road from his home is a large wooded lot, where he employed an EMF device normally used in the hunting of paranormal phenomena. He detected an electro-magnetic field near an oak tree, leading to his discovery of a temporal vortex. Gil traveled to the future metropolis which is the capital of Japan. There he observed two new wonders of the world. The first was a space elevator, rising one thousand kilometers into the outer atmosphere, being used to transfer men and equipment to lower earth orbit. The Japanese used the same technology in the construction of a second marvel, the Tokyo Tower of Babel. The tower is so tall that its penthouse sits above the level of the clouds.
One traveler now here is from the past, a knighted servant of King George the Fifth, of England in the year 1920. Lord HenryChatterton traveled here by means of the Chronos Velocipede, an invention for which he provided financial backing. Its name would suggest a common velocipede, the early forerunner of our modern-day bicyle, but Lord Henry explains the Latin term also translates literally into English as "the very fast time machine".
The Chronos Velocipede had been stored in a potting shed on his Lordship's estate. In a visit to the outlying building to inspect his acquisition, there came a sudden heavy rainfall. Caught by a thunderstorm, the shed was struck by lightning and he was rendered unconscious. When Chatterton awoke and the mist which surrounded him had cleared, he found himself transported in time. However he was not the inventor of the device, and did not fully understand how it worked.
When His Lordship was unable to reverse the time travel process he found himself stranded here, one hundred years into his own future. It took some time for him to learn our modern technology, and now Lord Henry is on the internet seeking the help of our physicists. These are only four of a select cadre of time travelers, currently posting on the internet forum at Paranormalis.
License links may all be found at https://creativecommons.org

Strain Hunters Jamaica Expedition (Full Length)

Please Subscribe to keep us going! OfficialSite: http://www.strainhunters.com http://www.greenhouseseeds.nl Facebook http://facebook.com/greenhouseseeds & http://facebook.com/strainhunters.official
Music by: Marlon Parkes aka Bobo Shanty
https://marlonparkes.wordpress.com/
Here we go again!
We board a flight from Amsterdam and in 9 hours we are in the Caribbean. After a layover of just a couple of hours on Curacao, we fly on to Jamaica. We land in Kingston around 11 am local time. The air is hot, but not too humid.
We have a 3 hours layover, so we decide to get out of the airport and go have lunch in Port Royal, half an hour away on the coast. It's a bit of a ghost-town, once a very rich merchant harbor, destroyed at the end of the seventeenth century by a powerful earthquake. It looks l...

published: 05 Jan 2014

Tribes living isolated from the world, Himba people

A tribe is viewed, developmentally or historically, as a social group existing before the development of, or outside, states. A tribe is a group of distinct people, dependent on their land for their livelihood, who are largely self-sufficient, and not integrated into the national society. It is perhaps the term most readily understood and used by the general public. Stephen Corry, director of Survival International, the world's only organisation dedicated to indigenous rights, defines tribal people as those who "...have followed ways of life for many generations that are largely self-sufficient, and are clearly different from the mainstream and dominant society."[1] This definition, however, would not apply in countries in the Middle East such as Iraq, where the entire population is a memb...

published: 18 Sep 2016

The great Indian traveler at Ennedi plateu -sahara desert

Women Who Travel For SEX Sun, sea and gigolos Full Documentary

Please Leave a comment after watching this video to share with us your opignion .
It is always a pleasure to hear from you !!
Do Not Forget To Like and Subscribe Here :
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5W8YdV870PEcHHGKxP3sBQ
Thank's For Watching

published: 19 Nov 2015

Extreme Railway Journeys S03E04 Trans Caucasus Railway

Chris travels along the route of the Soviet-era Trans-Caucasus Railway, beginning in the Azerbaijani capital of Baku. He then heads into Georgia, exploring Tbilisi's vintage metro system and funicular railway, before travelling to the holiday resort of Borjomi, where world-class engineering is on display in a mountain rail bridge designed by Gustave Eiffel.

published: 17 Nov 2017

Tibet Vacation Travel Video Guide

Travel video about destination Tibet.
Tibet is a relatively little known and mysterious land of snow high up in the Himalayas that borders Nepal, Bhutan ad India. It is protected by the highest mountains in the world and is a region that has developed a unique society whose philosophy, art and religious faith have earned much interest and respect.Lhasa is the capital of Tibet and also its largest city. The BarkhorRoad extends for eight hundred metres around the Jokhang Temple and nearby Tsuklakhang Square. For the faithful a visit to the Jokhang Temple is the highlight of a long and arduous pilgrimage and the Dalai Lama once sat in its inner courtyard during the monks’ annual final examination, which was also a splendid festive event. On the other side of the Chakpori, a small mountain op...

Extreme Trains S01E01 Coal Train

published: 29 Mar 2017

PURURAMBO w/counter narrative

Here's a documentary about one man's journey to meet the Kombai people of New Guinea. Included is a counter-narrative in the captions. I know my tone is a bit snarky, even condescending, toward the traveler, but I think he deserves it.
An Orientalist pov is displayed by Mr. Barabas in that he projects his own story on the tribe to serve his own end of journey-induced titillation. It can also be said that the story he brought with him says more about him than it does about the Kombai.
A CRT analysis also fits: Racism is endemic, so much so that a tribe tucked into the deepest jungle is still subject to it. Mr. Barabas puts his white supremacy on display by assuming his cultural norms are the standard by which the Kombai should be measured. The socially constructed nature of racism is also ...

published: 16 Mar 2016

Extreme Railway Journeys S03E05 On the Xmas Express

In this special Christmas edition of his train-based travelogue series, Chris Tarrant heads across Scandinavia on an epic journey from the beautiful southern fjords to Europe's most northerly passenger station at Narvik, where British warships won a famous victory during the Second World War, while also squeezing in a chat with a certain white-bearded gentleman. This is series 3 episode 5.

published: 17 Nov 2017

Gran Canaria (Spain) Vacation Travel Video Guide

Vacation travel video about destination Gran Canaria in Spain
--------------
Watch more travel videos ► https://goo.gl/MXPgSs
Join us. Subscribe now! ► https://goo.gl/awdDrh
Be our fan on Facebook ► http://goo.gl/0xmbQk
Follow us on Twitter ► http://goo.gl/334ln5
--------------
Thanks for all your support, rating the video and leaving a comment is always appreciated!
Please: respect each other in the comments.
Expoza Travel is taking you on a journey to the earth's most beautiful and fascinating places. Get inspiration and essentials with our travel guide videos and documentaries for your next trip, holiday, vacation or simply enjoy and get tips about all the beauty in the world...
It is yours to discover!

Please Subscribe to keep us going! OfficialSite: http://www.strainhunters.com http://www.greenhouseseeds.nl Facebook http://facebook.com/greenhouseseeds & http://facebook.com/strainhunters.official
Music by: Marlon Parkes aka Bobo Shanty
https://marlonparkes.wordpress.com/
Here we go again!
We board a flight from Amsterdam and in 9 hours we are in the Caribbean. After a layover of just a couple of hours on Curacao, we fly on to Jamaica. We land in Kingston around 11 am local time. The air is hot, but not too humid.
We have a 3 hours layover, so we decide to get out of the airport and go have lunch in Port Royal, half an hour away on the coast. It's a bit of a ghost-town, once a very rich merchant harbor, destroyed at the end of the seventeenth century by a powerful earthquake. It looks like it never really recoveredâ€¦
We eat lunch in a small fish-restaurant, famous for its snapper. But I eat jerk chicken because I am picky with my fish, and the jerk-spices here are amazing!
Of course we drink some Red Stripe beers, and Simon and myself decide it's time to find some weed. It does not take long before we hit the jackpot: literally on the side of the local Police station, along the seaside, there are some barracks and shacks; inside a group of Rastas is busy cleaning and chopping weed and rolling it up in small balls, using rolling papers as containers.
We ask if we can buy some, and the guys are thrilled. It's cheap, less than 1 Euro per gram. But it's a bit bitter, very leafy, and we enjoy it just because it's been a while since we smoked in Amsterdam! Some of the Rastas in the back are smoking crack cocaine in a glass pipe, the smell is terribly sour. They ask if we like some, and we politely tell them we are just here for the ganja; they nod, and scream "Jah Rastafari"!
We sit and smoke a joint with them, and chat a bit about the local weed, and the cops. It's incredible that this is all happening next to the Police station.
We leave as soon as the joint is over, and we go back to the restaurant to join the rest of the crew.
It's time to get back to the airport and catch a JamaicanAirlines flight to Montego Bay, where our local contacts are waiting. The flight is really short, under half hour, and we arrive in MoBay before sunset. Bigga, Shanti, Nampo and Taleban are waiting for us and it's great to see them again; Arjan and myself spent some crazy days with these guys not long ago, during our scouting trips on the island.
These guys are a tight crew, and they are going to take care of us during the next days of this filming trip.
Nampo is a older Rasta, wise man, with lots of contacts and very respected.
Taleban, his friend, is a grower and a smuggler, a real pirate and one of the funniest guys we ever had with us during our expeditions.
Bigga is our driver/bodyguard, he's a man of the road and he knows who and what you need to know to keep us safe.
Shanti is a local singer, a reggae artist with an amazing talent and a great personality. I know him since he was 10 years old, back in 1994, when I spent a few weeks near where he lived with his father (the man supplying me with fine herb at the time). It was really special to find Shanti during our scouting trips back in July, he's now a grown up manâ€¦ and I am getting old! Shanti will come along and make sure the soundtrack of our travels is inspiring and inspired.
We get the cars, two Toyota Fortuner, and we load up the mountain of gear we are carrying. Then we drive down to Negril in the sunset light, and when we arrive it's already dark. We decide to spend the first night at the Blue CaveCastle, a really cozy place on the rocky cliffs of Negril.
It's another true 1994-flashback for me, this is one of the places where I stayed when I was a 20-years-old ganja-traveler, already a StrainHunter without knowing itâ€¦. Of course to make the flashback even more intense the same room where I slept then is available, so I take it.
It still looks the same.
We are tired from the long travel, and we decide to go for some food. Unfortunately the chef is sick, so we decide to find something not too far away. We hit a jerk-chicken stand by the side of the road and we eat like there's no tomorrow.
After a few Red Stripes and a few joints we go back to the hotel, where we smoke some good amount of high-grade weed, and some "gum", the local finger-hash.
The weed is definitely an indica-cross, it tastes sweet and strong, and they say it's from a site not too far from where we are. We make a plan for tomorrow, and we go to sleep. Jamaica is great. It's a true privilege to be here again.
Jah Bless!
And now we are back with MisterX pics, the man is a true artist..... enjoy!
Read the live thread here: http://www.strainhunters.com/forums/topic/2820-strain-hunters-jamaica-live-thread/

Please Subscribe to keep us going! OfficialSite: http://www.strainhunters.com http://www.greenhouseseeds.nl Facebook http://facebook.com/greenhouseseeds & http://facebook.com/strainhunters.official
Music by: Marlon Parkes aka Bobo Shanty
https://marlonparkes.wordpress.com/
Here we go again!
We board a flight from Amsterdam and in 9 hours we are in the Caribbean. After a layover of just a couple of hours on Curacao, we fly on to Jamaica. We land in Kingston around 11 am local time. The air is hot, but not too humid.
We have a 3 hours layover, so we decide to get out of the airport and go have lunch in Port Royal, half an hour away on the coast. It's a bit of a ghost-town, once a very rich merchant harbor, destroyed at the end of the seventeenth century by a powerful earthquake. It looks like it never really recoveredâ€¦
We eat lunch in a small fish-restaurant, famous for its snapper. But I eat jerk chicken because I am picky with my fish, and the jerk-spices here are amazing!
Of course we drink some Red Stripe beers, and Simon and myself decide it's time to find some weed. It does not take long before we hit the jackpot: literally on the side of the local Police station, along the seaside, there are some barracks and shacks; inside a group of Rastas is busy cleaning and chopping weed and rolling it up in small balls, using rolling papers as containers.
We ask if we can buy some, and the guys are thrilled. It's cheap, less than 1 Euro per gram. But it's a bit bitter, very leafy, and we enjoy it just because it's been a while since we smoked in Amsterdam! Some of the Rastas in the back are smoking crack cocaine in a glass pipe, the smell is terribly sour. They ask if we like some, and we politely tell them we are just here for the ganja; they nod, and scream "Jah Rastafari"!
We sit and smoke a joint with them, and chat a bit about the local weed, and the cops. It's incredible that this is all happening next to the Police station.
We leave as soon as the joint is over, and we go back to the restaurant to join the rest of the crew.
It's time to get back to the airport and catch a JamaicanAirlines flight to Montego Bay, where our local contacts are waiting. The flight is really short, under half hour, and we arrive in MoBay before sunset. Bigga, Shanti, Nampo and Taleban are waiting for us and it's great to see them again; Arjan and myself spent some crazy days with these guys not long ago, during our scouting trips on the island.
These guys are a tight crew, and they are going to take care of us during the next days of this filming trip.
Nampo is a older Rasta, wise man, with lots of contacts and very respected.
Taleban, his friend, is a grower and a smuggler, a real pirate and one of the funniest guys we ever had with us during our expeditions.
Bigga is our driver/bodyguard, he's a man of the road and he knows who and what you need to know to keep us safe.
Shanti is a local singer, a reggae artist with an amazing talent and a great personality. I know him since he was 10 years old, back in 1994, when I spent a few weeks near where he lived with his father (the man supplying me with fine herb at the time). It was really special to find Shanti during our scouting trips back in July, he's now a grown up manâ€¦ and I am getting old! Shanti will come along and make sure the soundtrack of our travels is inspiring and inspired.
We get the cars, two Toyota Fortuner, and we load up the mountain of gear we are carrying. Then we drive down to Negril in the sunset light, and when we arrive it's already dark. We decide to spend the first night at the Blue CaveCastle, a really cozy place on the rocky cliffs of Negril.
It's another true 1994-flashback for me, this is one of the places where I stayed when I was a 20-years-old ganja-traveler, already a StrainHunter without knowing itâ€¦. Of course to make the flashback even more intense the same room where I slept then is available, so I take it.
It still looks the same.
We are tired from the long travel, and we decide to go for some food. Unfortunately the chef is sick, so we decide to find something not too far away. We hit a jerk-chicken stand by the side of the road and we eat like there's no tomorrow.
After a few Red Stripes and a few joints we go back to the hotel, where we smoke some good amount of high-grade weed, and some "gum", the local finger-hash.
The weed is definitely an indica-cross, it tastes sweet and strong, and they say it's from a site not too far from where we are. We make a plan for tomorrow, and we go to sleep. Jamaica is great. It's a true privilege to be here again.
Jah Bless!
And now we are back with MisterX pics, the man is a true artist..... enjoy!
Read the live thread here: http://www.strainhunters.com/forums/topic/2820-strain-hunters-jamaica-live-thread/

Tribes living isolated from the world, Himba people

A tribe is viewed, developmentally or historically, as a social group existing before the development of, or outside, states. A tribe is a group of distinct peo...

A tribe is viewed, developmentally or historically, as a social group existing before the development of, or outside, states. A tribe is a group of distinct people, dependent on their land for their livelihood, who are largely self-sufficient, and not integrated into the national society. It is perhaps the term most readily understood and used by the general public. Stephen Corry, director of Survival International, the world's only organisation dedicated to indigenous rights, defines tribal people as those who "...have followed ways of life for many generations that are largely self-sufficient, and are clearly different from the mainstream and dominant society."[1] This definition, however, would not apply in countries in the Middle East such as Iraq, where the entire population is a member of one tribe or another, and tribalism itself is dominant and mainstream.
There are an estimated one hundred and fifty million tribal individuals worldwide,[2] constituting around forty percent of indigenous individuals. Although nearly all tribal people are indigenous, some are not indigenous to the areas where they now live.
The distinction between tribal and indigenous is important because tribal peoples have a special status acknowledged in international law. They often face particular issues in addition to those faced by the wider category of indigenous peoples.
Many people used the term "tribal society" to refer to societies organized largely on the basis of social, especially familial, descent groups (see clan and kinship). A customary tribe in these terms is a face-to-face community, relatively bound by kinship relations, reciprocal exchange, and strong ties to place.[3]
"Tribe" is a contested term due to its roots of being defined by outsiders during the period of colonialism. The word has no shared referent, whether in political form, kinship relations or shared culture. Some argue that it conveys a negative connotation of a timeless unchanging past.[4][5][6] To avoid these implications, some have chosen to use the terms "ethnic group", or nation instead.
The ethnic groups of Africa number in the thousands, each generally having its own language (or dialect of a language) and culture. The ethnolinguistic groups include various Afro-Asiatic, Indo-European, Khoisan, Niger-Congo and Nilo-Saharan populations.
Central Africa[edit]
Luba in Democratic Republic of the Congo (c. 15 million)
Mongo in Democratic Republic of the Congo (c. 15 million)
Kongo in Democratic Republic of the Congo, Angola and Republic of the Congo (c. 10 million)
Kanuri in Nigeria,[4] Niger,[5] Chad[6] and Cameroon[7] (c. 10 million)
Horn of Africa[edit]
Oromo in Ethiopia (c. 30 million)
Amhara in Ethiopia (c. 25 million)
Somali in Somalia, Djibouti, Ethiopia and Kenya (c. 16-19 million)
Tigrayans in Ethiopia (c.6 million)
Tigrinyas in Eritrea (c.3 million)
Afar in Eritrea, Djibouti and Ethiopia(c. 4-5 million)
North Africa[edit]
Maghrebis in Maghreb (c. 110 million) including Berbers in Mauritania, Morocco (including Western Sahara), Algeria, Tunisia, and Libya (c. 30 million)
Egyptians in Egypt (c. 91 million) including Copts in Egypt and Sudan (c. 15 million)
Southeast Africa[edit]
Hutu in Rwanda, Burundi, and Democratic Republic of Congo (c. 15 million)
Chewa in Malawi and Zambia (c. 15 million)
Southern Africa[edit]
Shona in Zimbabwe and Mozambique (c. 15 million)
Zulu in South Africa (c. 10 million)
Sotho in South Africa and Lesotho (c. 6.4 million)
West Africa[edit]
Ethnic groups of Rivers State in Nigeria
Yoruba in Nigeria, Benin, Togo, Ghana, Ivory Coast and Sierra Leone (c. 40 million)
Hausa in Nigeria, Niger, Benin, Ghana, Cameroon, Chad and Sudan (c. 35 million)
Igbo in Nigeria (c. 32 million)
Mande peoples in The Gambia, Guinea, Mali, Sierra Leone, Ivory Coast, Senegal, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Liberia, Guinea Bissau, Niger, Mauritania and Chad (c. 30 million)
Akan in Ghana and Ivory Coast (c. 20 million)
Fula in Guinea, Nigeria, Cameroon, Senegal, Mali, Burkina Faso, Benin, Niger, Chad (c. 20 million)

A tribe is viewed, developmentally or historically, as a social group existing before the development of, or outside, states. A tribe is a group of distinct people, dependent on their land for their livelihood, who are largely self-sufficient, and not integrated into the national society. It is perhaps the term most readily understood and used by the general public. Stephen Corry, director of Survival International, the world's only organisation dedicated to indigenous rights, defines tribal people as those who "...have followed ways of life for many generations that are largely self-sufficient, and are clearly different from the mainstream and dominant society."[1] This definition, however, would not apply in countries in the Middle East such as Iraq, where the entire population is a member of one tribe or another, and tribalism itself is dominant and mainstream.
There are an estimated one hundred and fifty million tribal individuals worldwide,[2] constituting around forty percent of indigenous individuals. Although nearly all tribal people are indigenous, some are not indigenous to the areas where they now live.
The distinction between tribal and indigenous is important because tribal peoples have a special status acknowledged in international law. They often face particular issues in addition to those faced by the wider category of indigenous peoples.
Many people used the term "tribal society" to refer to societies organized largely on the basis of social, especially familial, descent groups (see clan and kinship). A customary tribe in these terms is a face-to-face community, relatively bound by kinship relations, reciprocal exchange, and strong ties to place.[3]
"Tribe" is a contested term due to its roots of being defined by outsiders during the period of colonialism. The word has no shared referent, whether in political form, kinship relations or shared culture. Some argue that it conveys a negative connotation of a timeless unchanging past.[4][5][6] To avoid these implications, some have chosen to use the terms "ethnic group", or nation instead.
The ethnic groups of Africa number in the thousands, each generally having its own language (or dialect of a language) and culture. The ethnolinguistic groups include various Afro-Asiatic, Indo-European, Khoisan, Niger-Congo and Nilo-Saharan populations.
Central Africa[edit]
Luba in Democratic Republic of the Congo (c. 15 million)
Mongo in Democratic Republic of the Congo (c. 15 million)
Kongo in Democratic Republic of the Congo, Angola and Republic of the Congo (c. 10 million)
Kanuri in Nigeria,[4] Niger,[5] Chad[6] and Cameroon[7] (c. 10 million)
Horn of Africa[edit]
Oromo in Ethiopia (c. 30 million)
Amhara in Ethiopia (c. 25 million)
Somali in Somalia, Djibouti, Ethiopia and Kenya (c. 16-19 million)
Tigrayans in Ethiopia (c.6 million)
Tigrinyas in Eritrea (c.3 million)
Afar in Eritrea, Djibouti and Ethiopia(c. 4-5 million)
North Africa[edit]
Maghrebis in Maghreb (c. 110 million) including Berbers in Mauritania, Morocco (including Western Sahara), Algeria, Tunisia, and Libya (c. 30 million)
Egyptians in Egypt (c. 91 million) including Copts in Egypt and Sudan (c. 15 million)
Southeast Africa[edit]
Hutu in Rwanda, Burundi, and Democratic Republic of Congo (c. 15 million)
Chewa in Malawi and Zambia (c. 15 million)
Southern Africa[edit]
Shona in Zimbabwe and Mozambique (c. 15 million)
Zulu in South Africa (c. 10 million)
Sotho in South Africa and Lesotho (c. 6.4 million)
West Africa[edit]
Ethnic groups of Rivers State in Nigeria
Yoruba in Nigeria, Benin, Togo, Ghana, Ivory Coast and Sierra Leone (c. 40 million)
Hausa in Nigeria, Niger, Benin, Ghana, Cameroon, Chad and Sudan (c. 35 million)
Igbo in Nigeria (c. 32 million)
Mande peoples in The Gambia, Guinea, Mali, Sierra Leone, Ivory Coast, Senegal, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Liberia, Guinea Bissau, Niger, Mauritania and Chad (c. 30 million)
Akan in Ghana and Ivory Coast (c. 20 million)
Fula in Guinea, Nigeria, Cameroon, Senegal, Mali, Burkina Faso, Benin, Niger, Chad (c. 20 million)

Women Who Travel For SEX Sun, sea and gigolos Full Documentary

Please Leave a comment after watching this video to share with us your opignion .
It is always a pleasure to hear from you !!
Do Not Forget To Like and Subs...

Please Leave a comment after watching this video to share with us your opignion .
It is always a pleasure to hear from you !!
Do Not Forget To Like and Subscribe Here :
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5W8YdV870PEcHHGKxP3sBQ
Thank's For Watching

Please Leave a comment after watching this video to share with us your opignion .
It is always a pleasure to hear from you !!
Do Not Forget To Like and Subscribe Here :
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5W8YdV870PEcHHGKxP3sBQ
Thank's For Watching

Chris travels along the route of the Soviet-era Trans-Caucasus Railway, beginning in the Azerbaijani capital of Baku. He then heads into Georgia, exploring Tbilisi's vintage metro system and funicular railway, before travelling to the holiday resort of Borjomi, where world-class engineering is on display in a mountain rail bridge designed by Gustave Eiffel.

Chris travels along the route of the Soviet-era Trans-Caucasus Railway, beginning in the Azerbaijani capital of Baku. He then heads into Georgia, exploring Tbilisi's vintage metro system and funicular railway, before travelling to the holiday resort of Borjomi, where world-class engineering is on display in a mountain rail bridge designed by Gustave Eiffel.

Tibet Vacation Travel Video Guide

Travel video about destination Tibet.
Tibet is a relatively little known and mysterious land of snow high up in the Himalayas that borders Nepal, Bhutan ad Indi...

Travel video about destination Tibet.
Tibet is a relatively little known and mysterious land of snow high up in the Himalayas that borders Nepal, Bhutan ad India. It is protected by the highest mountains in the world and is a region that has developed a unique society whose philosophy, art and religious faith have earned much interest and respect.Lhasa is the capital of Tibet and also its largest city. The BarkhorRoad extends for eight hundred metres around the Jokhang Temple and nearby Tsuklakhang Square. For the faithful a visit to the Jokhang Temple is the highlight of a long and arduous pilgrimage and the Dalai Lama once sat in its inner courtyard during the monks’ annual final examination, which was also a splendid festive event. On the other side of the Chakpori, a small mountain opposite Potala, is the seldom visited Sang Gya Thong Ku Temple that is somewhat hidden away and therefore off the tourist trail. This ‘temple of a thousand images of god’ is nevertheless very popular among devout Buddhists and is a place of silent prayer. The Yarlung Valley is full of history such as possessing the oldest field in Tibet, as well as the oldest village that is located at the foot of the country’s oldest fortress, Yom Bu La Khang, the rock palace of the country’s first mystic king. One of the largest monuments in Tibetan architecture is the unique Kumbum Chörten, a three-dimensional mandala that can be entered. Eyes decorate the upper part of the Stupa. The ritual walkabout begins on the lowest level with simple deities then follows the entire Pantheon of Tibet, immortalised in both sculptures and wall paintings. DespiteChinese influence, Tibet is still a religiously devout country with a fascinating monastery culture and amazing natural scenery. Tashi Delek! Happiness and Blessings!On the “roof of the world” one is always close to the gods…!...

Travel video about destination Tibet.
Tibet is a relatively little known and mysterious land of snow high up in the Himalayas that borders Nepal, Bhutan ad India. It is protected by the highest mountains in the world and is a region that has developed a unique society whose philosophy, art and religious faith have earned much interest and respect.Lhasa is the capital of Tibet and also its largest city. The BarkhorRoad extends for eight hundred metres around the Jokhang Temple and nearby Tsuklakhang Square. For the faithful a visit to the Jokhang Temple is the highlight of a long and arduous pilgrimage and the Dalai Lama once sat in its inner courtyard during the monks’ annual final examination, which was also a splendid festive event. On the other side of the Chakpori, a small mountain opposite Potala, is the seldom visited Sang Gya Thong Ku Temple that is somewhat hidden away and therefore off the tourist trail. This ‘temple of a thousand images of god’ is nevertheless very popular among devout Buddhists and is a place of silent prayer. The Yarlung Valley is full of history such as possessing the oldest field in Tibet, as well as the oldest village that is located at the foot of the country’s oldest fortress, Yom Bu La Khang, the rock palace of the country’s first mystic king. One of the largest monuments in Tibetan architecture is the unique Kumbum Chörten, a three-dimensional mandala that can be entered. Eyes decorate the upper part of the Stupa. The ritual walkabout begins on the lowest level with simple deities then follows the entire Pantheon of Tibet, immortalised in both sculptures and wall paintings. DespiteChinese influence, Tibet is still a religiously devout country with a fascinating monastery culture and amazing natural scenery. Tashi Delek! Happiness and Blessings!On the “roof of the world” one is always close to the gods…!...

PURURAMBO w/counter narrative

Here's a documentary about one man's journey to meet the Kombai people of New Guinea. Included is a counter-narrative in the captions. I know my tone is a bit s...

Here's a documentary about one man's journey to meet the Kombai people of New Guinea. Included is a counter-narrative in the captions. I know my tone is a bit snarky, even condescending, toward the traveler, but I think he deserves it.
An Orientalist pov is displayed by Mr. Barabas in that he projects his own story on the tribe to serve his own end of journey-induced titillation. It can also be said that the story he brought with him says more about him than it does about the Kombai.
A CRT analysis also fits: Racism is endemic, so much so that a tribe tucked into the deepest jungle is still subject to it. Mr. Barabas puts his white supremacy on display by assuming his cultural norms are the standard by which the Kombai should be measured. The socially constructed nature of racism is also in evidence, insofar as the Kombai play no part in it (they are in the unique position of being utterly separated from the society that constructs racism) and necessarily don't 'play their role' in it...they are who they are (generous, hardworking, and hospitable) no matter how much Mr. Barabas insults them. The Kombai are racialized as subhuman and primitive in a way that an urban youth is not, the two groups are differentially racialized; as are the "arboreal" Kombai and the "kind" tribesman outside the pacification zone. The natives' treatment was multidimesional and intersectional because they were perceived differently based on their sex or their religion. And finally, the story of the Kombai can only be told by them, and I think they did a fine job of letting their actions speak for what kind of people they were (in stark relief to Barabas' insistence that they were violent, cannibalistic headhunters)
Finally, Mr. Barabas' white privilege was evident not just in his arrogance that his cultural standard was the one to be lived up to, but also in his ability to negotiate laws, obtaining those permits and "special stamps", that the very tribesman that helped him could never hope to.

Here's a documentary about one man's journey to meet the Kombai people of New Guinea. Included is a counter-narrative in the captions. I know my tone is a bit snarky, even condescending, toward the traveler, but I think he deserves it.
An Orientalist pov is displayed by Mr. Barabas in that he projects his own story on the tribe to serve his own end of journey-induced titillation. It can also be said that the story he brought with him says more about him than it does about the Kombai.
A CRT analysis also fits: Racism is endemic, so much so that a tribe tucked into the deepest jungle is still subject to it. Mr. Barabas puts his white supremacy on display by assuming his cultural norms are the standard by which the Kombai should be measured. The socially constructed nature of racism is also in evidence, insofar as the Kombai play no part in it (they are in the unique position of being utterly separated from the society that constructs racism) and necessarily don't 'play their role' in it...they are who they are (generous, hardworking, and hospitable) no matter how much Mr. Barabas insults them. The Kombai are racialized as subhuman and primitive in a way that an urban youth is not, the two groups are differentially racialized; as are the "arboreal" Kombai and the "kind" tribesman outside the pacification zone. The natives' treatment was multidimesional and intersectional because they were perceived differently based on their sex or their religion. And finally, the story of the Kombai can only be told by them, and I think they did a fine job of letting their actions speak for what kind of people they were (in stark relief to Barabas' insistence that they were violent, cannibalistic headhunters)
Finally, Mr. Barabas' white privilege was evident not just in his arrogance that his cultural standard was the one to be lived up to, but also in his ability to negotiate laws, obtaining those permits and "special stamps", that the very tribesman that helped him could never hope to.

In this special Christmas edition of his train-based travelogue series, Chris Tarrant heads across Scandinavia on an epic journey from the beautiful southern fjords to Europe's most northerly passenger station at Narvik, where British warships won a famous victory during the Second World War, while also squeezing in a chat with a certain white-bearded gentleman. This is series 3 episode 5.

In this special Christmas edition of his train-based travelogue series, Chris Tarrant heads across Scandinavia on an epic journey from the beautiful southern fjords to Europe's most northerly passenger station at Narvik, where British warships won a famous victory during the Second World War, while also squeezing in a chat with a certain white-bearded gentleman. This is series 3 episode 5.

Vacation travel video about destination Gran Canaria in Spain
--------------
Watch more travel videos ► https://goo.gl/MXPgSs
Join us. Subscribe now! ► https://goo.gl/awdDrh
Be our fan on Facebook ► http://goo.gl/0xmbQk
Follow us on Twitter ► http://goo.gl/334ln5
--------------
Thanks for all your support, rating the video and leaving a comment is always appreciated!
Please: respect each other in the comments.
Expoza Travel is taking you on a journey to the earth's most beautiful and fascinating places. Get inspiration and essentials with our travel guide videos and documentaries for your next trip, holiday, vacation or simply enjoy and get tips about all the beauty in the world...
It is yours to discover!

Vacation travel video about destination Gran Canaria in Spain
--------------
Watch more travel videos ► https://goo.gl/MXPgSs
Join us. Subscribe now! ► https://goo.gl/awdDrh
Be our fan on Facebook ► http://goo.gl/0xmbQk
Follow us on Twitter ► http://goo.gl/334ln5
--------------
Thanks for all your support, rating the video and leaving a comment is always appreciated!
Please: respect each other in the comments.
Expoza Travel is taking you on a journey to the earth's most beautiful and fascinating places. Get inspiration and essentials with our travel guide videos and documentaries for your next trip, holiday, vacation or simply enjoy and get tips about all the beauty in the world...
It is yours to discover!

60 Seconds of Life on the Congo River | National Geographic

While on assignment for National Geographic magazine, photographer Pascal Maitre captured footage that offers a quick glimpse into daily life on the Congo River.
Click here to see more photos from the expedition: http://proof.nationalgeographic.com/2015/09/09/surrendering-to-the-flow-of-the-congo/
PRODUCER: Shannon Sanders
VIDEOGRAPHERS: Pascal Maitre and SusanWelchman
➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe
About National Geographic:
National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and adventure. Through their world-class scientists, photographers, journalists, and filmmakers, Nat Geo gets you closer to the stories that matter and past the edge of what's possible.
Get More National Geographic:
OfficialSite: http://bit.ly/NatGeoOfficialSite
Facebook: http://bit.ly/FBNatGeo
Twitter: http://bit.ly/NatGeoTwitter
Instagram: http://bit.ly/NatGeoInsta
[Video title]
https://youtu.be/
National Geographic
https://www.youtube.com/natgeo

7:21

Congo/Congolese Tag

Hey guys!
Welcome to my channel! What’s up guys! Time for a new video and today I decide...

Congo/Congolese Tag

Hey guys!
Welcome to my channel! What’s up guys! Time for a new video and today I decided to do the Congo/Congolese tag! Get to know me and my Congolese background. If you have any questions, feel free to commen below. LOVE!
Hope you enjoy! Make sure you LIKE/SHARE and SUBSCRIBE!
Music: Fabregas - MascaraMIAMI VLOG: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rw8lO...
MADRID VLOG: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mwBiQ...
10 THINGS ABOUT LIVING ABROAD: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Skfh...
----------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------
Hey You! I'm Lynda K and I make videos about all things travel and lifestyle related! I share my tips, tricks and create videos I’m passionate about. Make yourself comfortable and enjoy!
YOU CAN ALSO FIND ME ON INSTAGRAM, COME AND SAY HI!
♡ INSTAGRAM: http://instagram.com/lyndakonde

41:22

Strain Hunters Jamaica Expedition (Full Length)

Please Subscribe to keep us going! Official Site: http://www.strainhunters.com http://www....

Strain Hunters Jamaica Expedition (Full Length)

Please Subscribe to keep us going! OfficialSite: http://www.strainhunters.com http://www.greenhouseseeds.nl Facebook http://facebook.com/greenhouseseeds & http://facebook.com/strainhunters.official
Music by: Marlon Parkes aka Bobo Shanty
https://marlonparkes.wordpress.com/
Here we go again!
We board a flight from Amsterdam and in 9 hours we are in the Caribbean. After a layover of just a couple of hours on Curacao, we fly on to Jamaica. We land in Kingston around 11 am local time. The air is hot, but not too humid.
We have a 3 hours layover, so we decide to get out of the airport and go have lunch in Port Royal, half an hour away on the coast. It's a bit of a ghost-town, once a very rich merchant harbor, destroyed at the end of the seventeenth century by a powerful earthquake. It looks like it never really recoveredâ€¦
We eat lunch in a small fish-restaurant, famous for its snapper. But I eat jerk chicken because I am picky with my fish, and the jerk-spices here are amazing!
Of course we drink some Red Stripe beers, and Simon and myself decide it's time to find some weed. It does not take long before we hit the jackpot: literally on the side of the local Police station, along the seaside, there are some barracks and shacks; inside a group of Rastas is busy cleaning and chopping weed and rolling it up in small balls, using rolling papers as containers.
We ask if we can buy some, and the guys are thrilled. It's cheap, less than 1 Euro per gram. But it's a bit bitter, very leafy, and we enjoy it just because it's been a while since we smoked in Amsterdam! Some of the Rastas in the back are smoking crack cocaine in a glass pipe, the smell is terribly sour. They ask if we like some, and we politely tell them we are just here for the ganja; they nod, and scream "Jah Rastafari"!
We sit and smoke a joint with them, and chat a bit about the local weed, and the cops. It's incredible that this is all happening next to the Police station.
We leave as soon as the joint is over, and we go back to the restaurant to join the rest of the crew.
It's time to get back to the airport and catch a JamaicanAirlines flight to Montego Bay, where our local contacts are waiting. The flight is really short, under half hour, and we arrive in MoBay before sunset. Bigga, Shanti, Nampo and Taleban are waiting for us and it's great to see them again; Arjan and myself spent some crazy days with these guys not long ago, during our scouting trips on the island.
These guys are a tight crew, and they are going to take care of us during the next days of this filming trip.
Nampo is a older Rasta, wise man, with lots of contacts and very respected.
Taleban, his friend, is a grower and a smuggler, a real pirate and one of the funniest guys we ever had with us during our expeditions.
Bigga is our driver/bodyguard, he's a man of the road and he knows who and what you need to know to keep us safe.
Shanti is a local singer, a reggae artist with an amazing talent and a great personality. I know him since he was 10 years old, back in 1994, when I spent a few weeks near where he lived with his father (the man supplying me with fine herb at the time). It was really special to find Shanti during our scouting trips back in July, he's now a grown up manâ€¦ and I am getting old! Shanti will come along and make sure the soundtrack of our travels is inspiring and inspired.
We get the cars, two Toyota Fortuner, and we load up the mountain of gear we are carrying. Then we drive down to Negril in the sunset light, and when we arrive it's already dark. We decide to spend the first night at the Blue CaveCastle, a really cozy place on the rocky cliffs of Negril.
It's another true 1994-flashback for me, this is one of the places where I stayed when I was a 20-years-old ganja-traveler, already a StrainHunter without knowing itâ€¦. Of course to make the flashback even more intense the same room where I slept then is available, so I take it.
It still looks the same.
We are tired from the long travel, and we decide to go for some food. Unfortunately the chef is sick, so we decide to find something not too far away. We hit a jerk-chicken stand by the side of the road and we eat like there's no tomorrow.
After a few Red Stripes and a few joints we go back to the hotel, where we smoke some good amount of high-grade weed, and some "gum", the local finger-hash.
The weed is definitely an indica-cross, it tastes sweet and strong, and they say it's from a site not too far from where we are. We make a plan for tomorrow, and we go to sleep. Jamaica is great. It's a true privilege to be here again.
Jah Bless!
And now we are back with MisterX pics, the man is a true artist..... enjoy!
Read the live thread here: http://www.strainhunters.com/forums/topic/2820-strain-hunters-jamaica-live-thread/

Men's Voyager 2.0 Travel Blazer

Built rugged. Wears refined. Performance-stretch blazer is all about comfort and life on the road. Nylon/spandex Flexion soft shell fabric is rugged, breathable, and packable. StormRepel durable water-repellent (DWR) finish sheds moisture. Intelligent pocketing includes exclusive TripZip interior pocket for organizing boarding pass, passport, phone, and other essentials, and features a zip compartment with media port. Refined cut and drape take you easily from casual day excursions to dinners out.

How to Travel Africa Solo (Even as a Girl)

I backpacked through Africa by myself and loved it! I went through 13 countries (South Africa, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Malawi, Tanzania, Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia, Sudan, and Egypt). I definitely recommend others (even girls) to do it too.
I wrote 5 "how to" steps (including what phone to bring, $, etc) in the article, "How to Travel Africa Solo (Even as a Girl)" . Check it out here:
If you have more questions, find Backpacking Africa for Beginners on FB, like the page, and post your question.https://www.facebook.com/backpackingafricaforbeginners or even better on backpackers community at http://backpackingafricaforbeginners.com/forums/

Angolan African mud Adventure!

Checkout: https://overlandingshop.com for overlander and adventure traveler gear!
I was stuck between Angolan mud and Congo visas. Took three days to get out of this 175km stretch of road and this was the good stuff, it was allot of fun but very difficult. Sorry about the shaky video, all my footage was lost and this was all that was left. The road was not on google maps, just on open street maps that I installed on the Garmin.
Here are some more photos: https://www.facebook.com/pg/wheelieadventurous/photos/?tab=album&album_id=1740639446165785
Mission: Circumnavigate AfricaBike: BMWR 1200 GSAdventure
https://www.facebook.com/wheelieadventurous/
Subscribe: http://www.youtube.com/user/WheelieAdventurous?sub_confirmation=1
---------------------------------
GET SOCIAL
----------------------------------
Get more:
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/wheelieadventurous
YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/user/WheelieAdventurous

Gisenyi: View the Congo - Rwanda Border from the Highest Peak of the Rubavu Hills

When in Rwanda I got a chance to climb the Rubavu hills in Gisenyi. On making it to the highest peak I enjoyed a view only experienced by the farmers who till the hilltop. From here I saw a lot of things that are not visible from the ground. The Democratic Republic of Congo was beautifully laid out below. I could see past the Goma Airport. Settlements cover every available inch of the flat land between the hills of the region.

1:17

The Pantanal - The world's largest swamp

The Pantanal is a natural region encompassing the world's largest tropical wetland area. L...

The Pantanal - The world's largest swamp

The Pantanal is a natural region encompassing the world's largest tropical wetland area. Located in the geographical heart of South America, the Pantanal stretches across the states of Mato Grosso and Mato Grosso do Sul and west in to both Bolivia and Paraguay, it covers an area of 75,000 square miles (195,000 sq km), making it the world’s largest wetlands. Cuiabá in the north and Campo Grande and Corumbá in the south are the main gateways to the region.
Covering an area nearly the size of the United Kingdom, the Pantanal, is made up of a collection of ecosystems that house one of the planet’s greatest variety of flora and fauna, including an immense diversity of bird and wildlife. It is thought to have the greatest concentration of animals in the Western Hemisphere and UNESCO has designated parts of the Pantanal as a World Heritage Centre.
Due to its more open vegetation, it is often easier to view wildlife and birdlife in the Pantanal than in the more dense vegetation of the Amazon region. During the rainy season, which runs from November through April, the animals and other wildlife take shelter on the higher ground as the waters rise and flood up to 80% of the plains. In May the waters start to recede, and while the land-based wildlife has more space to spread, the fish and other water born species find themselves corralled in lagoons. Large quantities of over 250 species of fish have been catalogued in the rivers and waters of the Pantanal and are a major attraction for fishermen.
Subsribe on HappyTraveler - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCB7ViK_fZPd3-3XzIgQKWYg?sub_confirmation=1

Time Traveler Claims He Captured This Photo Of Jesus

Time traveler claims he captured this photo of Jesus. We take a look at an alleged photo of Jesus captured by a time traveler.
FatherPellegrino Ernetti greeted Father Francois Brune one afternoon in the early 1960's. The two men had just met for the first time the day before during a ferry ride across Venice's Grand Canal. During their short conversation, Father Ernetti had said something that stuck in Father Brune's mind. The two, who were both experts on ancient languages, were talking about scriptural interpretation when Father Ernetti remarked that there existed a machine that could easily answer all their questions.
Thank you for watching!
Thank you to CO.AG for the background music!

Strain Hunters Jamaica Expedition (Full Length)

Please Subscribe to keep us going! OfficialSite: http://www.strainhunters.com http://www.greenhouseseeds.nl Facebook http://facebook.com/greenhouseseeds & http://facebook.com/strainhunters.official
Music by: Marlon Parkes aka Bobo Shanty
https://marlonparkes.wordpress.com/
Here we go again!
We board a flight from Amsterdam and in 9 hours we are in the Caribbean. After a layover of just a couple of hours on Curacao, we fly on to Jamaica. We land in Kingston around 11 am local time. The air is hot, but not too humid.
We have a 3 hours layover, so we decide to get out of the airport and go have lunch in Port Royal, half an hour away on the coast. It's a bit of a ghost-town, once a very rich merchant harbor, destroyed at the end of the seventeenth century by a powerful earthquake. It looks like it never really recoveredâ€¦
We eat lunch in a small fish-restaurant, famous for its snapper. But I eat jerk chicken because I am picky with my fish, and the jerk-spices here are amazing!
Of course we drink some Red Stripe beers, and Simon and myself decide it's time to find some weed. It does not take long before we hit the jackpot: literally on the side of the local Police station, along the seaside, there are some barracks and shacks; inside a group of Rastas is busy cleaning and chopping weed and rolling it up in small balls, using rolling papers as containers.
We ask if we can buy some, and the guys are thrilled. It's cheap, less than 1 Euro per gram. But it's a bit bitter, very leafy, and we enjoy it just because it's been a while since we smoked in Amsterdam! Some of the Rastas in the back are smoking crack cocaine in a glass pipe, the smell is terribly sour. They ask if we like some, and we politely tell them we are just here for the ganja; they nod, and scream "Jah Rastafari"!
We sit and smoke a joint with them, and chat a bit about the local weed, and the cops. It's incredible that this is all happening next to the Police station.
We leave as soon as the joint is over, and we go back to the restaurant to join the rest of the crew.
It's time to get back to the airport and catch a JamaicanAirlines flight to Montego Bay, where our local contacts are waiting. The flight is really short, under half hour, and we arrive in MoBay before sunset. Bigga, Shanti, Nampo and Taleban are waiting for us and it's great to see them again; Arjan and myself spent some crazy days with these guys not long ago, during our scouting trips on the island.
These guys are a tight crew, and they are going to take care of us during the next days of this filming trip.
Nampo is a older Rasta, wise man, with lots of contacts and very respected.
Taleban, his friend, is a grower and a smuggler, a real pirate and one of the funniest guys we ever had with us during our expeditions.
Bigga is our driver/bodyguard, he's a man of the road and he knows who and what you need to know to keep us safe.
Shanti is a local singer, a reggae artist with an amazing talent and a great personality. I know him since he was 10 years old, back in 1994, when I spent a few weeks near where he lived with his father (the man supplying me with fine herb at the time). It was really special to find Shanti during our scouting trips back in July, he's now a grown up manâ€¦ and I am getting old! Shanti will come along and make sure the soundtrack of our travels is inspiring and inspired.
We get the cars, two Toyota Fortuner, and we load up the mountain of gear we are carrying. Then we drive down to Negril in the sunset light, and when we arrive it's already dark. We decide to spend the first night at the Blue CaveCastle, a really cozy place on the rocky cliffs of Negril.
It's another true 1994-flashback for me, this is one of the places where I stayed when I was a 20-years-old ganja-traveler, already a StrainHunter without knowing itâ€¦. Of course to make the flashback even more intense the same room where I slept then is available, so I take it.
It still looks the same.
We are tired from the long travel, and we decide to go for some food. Unfortunately the chef is sick, so we decide to find something not too far away. We hit a jerk-chicken stand by the side of the road and we eat like there's no tomorrow.
After a few Red Stripes and a few joints we go back to the hotel, where we smoke some good amount of high-grade weed, and some "gum", the local finger-hash.
The weed is definitely an indica-cross, it tastes sweet and strong, and they say it's from a site not too far from where we are. We make a plan for tomorrow, and we go to sleep. Jamaica is great. It's a true privilege to be here again.
Jah Bless!
And now we are back with MisterX pics, the man is a true artist..... enjoy!
Read the live thread here: http://www.strainhunters.com/forums/topic/2820-strain-hunters-jamaica-live-thread/

25:30

Tribes living isolated from the world, Himba people

A tribe is viewed, developmentally or historically, as a social group existing before the ...

Tribes living isolated from the world, Himba people

A tribe is viewed, developmentally or historically, as a social group existing before the development of, or outside, states. A tribe is a group of distinct people, dependent on their land for their livelihood, who are largely self-sufficient, and not integrated into the national society. It is perhaps the term most readily understood and used by the general public. Stephen Corry, director of Survival International, the world's only organisation dedicated to indigenous rights, defines tribal people as those who "...have followed ways of life for many generations that are largely self-sufficient, and are clearly different from the mainstream and dominant society."[1] This definition, however, would not apply in countries in the Middle East such as Iraq, where the entire population is a member of one tribe or another, and tribalism itself is dominant and mainstream.
There are an estimated one hundred and fifty million tribal individuals worldwide,[2] constituting around forty percent of indigenous individuals. Although nearly all tribal people are indigenous, some are not indigenous to the areas where they now live.
The distinction between tribal and indigenous is important because tribal peoples have a special status acknowledged in international law. They often face particular issues in addition to those faced by the wider category of indigenous peoples.
Many people used the term "tribal society" to refer to societies organized largely on the basis of social, especially familial, descent groups (see clan and kinship). A customary tribe in these terms is a face-to-face community, relatively bound by kinship relations, reciprocal exchange, and strong ties to place.[3]
"Tribe" is a contested term due to its roots of being defined by outsiders during the period of colonialism. The word has no shared referent, whether in political form, kinship relations or shared culture. Some argue that it conveys a negative connotation of a timeless unchanging past.[4][5][6] To avoid these implications, some have chosen to use the terms "ethnic group", or nation instead.
The ethnic groups of Africa number in the thousands, each generally having its own language (or dialect of a language) and culture. The ethnolinguistic groups include various Afro-Asiatic, Indo-European, Khoisan, Niger-Congo and Nilo-Saharan populations.
Central Africa[edit]
Luba in Democratic Republic of the Congo (c. 15 million)
Mongo in Democratic Republic of the Congo (c. 15 million)
Kongo in Democratic Republic of the Congo, Angola and Republic of the Congo (c. 10 million)
Kanuri in Nigeria,[4] Niger,[5] Chad[6] and Cameroon[7] (c. 10 million)
Horn of Africa[edit]
Oromo in Ethiopia (c. 30 million)
Amhara in Ethiopia (c. 25 million)
Somali in Somalia, Djibouti, Ethiopia and Kenya (c. 16-19 million)
Tigrayans in Ethiopia (c.6 million)
Tigrinyas in Eritrea (c.3 million)
Afar in Eritrea, Djibouti and Ethiopia(c. 4-5 million)
North Africa[edit]
Maghrebis in Maghreb (c. 110 million) including Berbers in Mauritania, Morocco (including Western Sahara), Algeria, Tunisia, and Libya (c. 30 million)
Egyptians in Egypt (c. 91 million) including Copts in Egypt and Sudan (c. 15 million)
Southeast Africa[edit]
Hutu in Rwanda, Burundi, and Democratic Republic of Congo (c. 15 million)
Chewa in Malawi and Zambia (c. 15 million)
Southern Africa[edit]
Shona in Zimbabwe and Mozambique (c. 15 million)
Zulu in South Africa (c. 10 million)
Sotho in South Africa and Lesotho (c. 6.4 million)
West Africa[edit]
Ethnic groups of Rivers State in Nigeria
Yoruba in Nigeria, Benin, Togo, Ghana, Ivory Coast and Sierra Leone (c. 40 million)
Hausa in Nigeria, Niger, Benin, Ghana, Cameroon, Chad and Sudan (c. 35 million)
Igbo in Nigeria (c. 32 million)
Mande peoples in The Gambia, Guinea, Mali, Sierra Leone, Ivory Coast, Senegal, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Liberia, Guinea Bissau, Niger, Mauritania and Chad (c. 30 million)
Akan in Ghana and Ivory Coast (c. 20 million)
Fula in Guinea, Nigeria, Cameroon, Senegal, Mali, Burkina Faso, Benin, Niger, Chad (c. 20 million)

Women Who Travel For SEX Sun, sea and gigolos Full Documentary

Please Leave a comment after watching this video to share with us your opignion .
It is always a pleasure to hear from you !!
Do Not Forget To Like and Subscribe Here :
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5W8YdV870PEcHHGKxP3sBQ
Thank's For Watching

43:35

Extreme Railway Journeys S03E04 Trans Caucasus Railway

Chris travels along the route of the Soviet-era Trans-Caucasus Railway, beginning in the A...

Extreme Railway Journeys S03E04 Trans Caucasus Railway

Chris travels along the route of the Soviet-era Trans-Caucasus Railway, beginning in the Azerbaijani capital of Baku. He then heads into Georgia, exploring Tbilisi's vintage metro system and funicular railway, before travelling to the holiday resort of Borjomi, where world-class engineering is on display in a mountain rail bridge designed by Gustave Eiffel.

51:34

Tibet Vacation Travel Video Guide

Travel video about destination Tibet.
Tibet is a relatively little known and mysterious la...

Tibet Vacation Travel Video Guide

Travel video about destination Tibet.
Tibet is a relatively little known and mysterious land of snow high up in the Himalayas that borders Nepal, Bhutan ad India. It is protected by the highest mountains in the world and is a region that has developed a unique society whose philosophy, art and religious faith have earned much interest and respect.Lhasa is the capital of Tibet and also its largest city. The BarkhorRoad extends for eight hundred metres around the Jokhang Temple and nearby Tsuklakhang Square. For the faithful a visit to the Jokhang Temple is the highlight of a long and arduous pilgrimage and the Dalai Lama once sat in its inner courtyard during the monks’ annual final examination, which was also a splendid festive event. On the other side of the Chakpori, a small mountain opposite Potala, is the seldom visited Sang Gya Thong Ku Temple that is somewhat hidden away and therefore off the tourist trail. This ‘temple of a thousand images of god’ is nevertheless very popular among devout Buddhists and is a place of silent prayer. The Yarlung Valley is full of history such as possessing the oldest field in Tibet, as well as the oldest village that is located at the foot of the country’s oldest fortress, Yom Bu La Khang, the rock palace of the country’s first mystic king. One of the largest monuments in Tibetan architecture is the unique Kumbum Chörten, a three-dimensional mandala that can be entered. Eyes decorate the upper part of the Stupa. The ritual walkabout begins on the lowest level with simple deities then follows the entire Pantheon of Tibet, immortalised in both sculptures and wall paintings. DespiteChinese influence, Tibet is still a religiously devout country with a fascinating monastery culture and amazing natural scenery. Tashi Delek! Happiness and Blessings!On the “roof of the world” one is always close to the gods…!...

27:36

Why Reptilians are irresistible

Hybrid Reptilians characterized as charismatic based on the illusion projected by bypassin...

PURURAMBO w/counter narrative

Here's a documentary about one man's journey to meet the Kombai people of New Guinea. Included is a counter-narrative in the captions. I know my tone is a bit snarky, even condescending, toward the traveler, but I think he deserves it.
An Orientalist pov is displayed by Mr. Barabas in that he projects his own story on the tribe to serve his own end of journey-induced titillation. It can also be said that the story he brought with him says more about him than it does about the Kombai.
A CRT analysis also fits: Racism is endemic, so much so that a tribe tucked into the deepest jungle is still subject to it. Mr. Barabas puts his white supremacy on display by assuming his cultural norms are the standard by which the Kombai should be measured. The socially constructed nature of racism is also in evidence, insofar as the Kombai play no part in it (they are in the unique position of being utterly separated from the society that constructs racism) and necessarily don't 'play their role' in it...they are who they are (generous, hardworking, and hospitable) no matter how much Mr. Barabas insults them. The Kombai are racialized as subhuman and primitive in a way that an urban youth is not, the two groups are differentially racialized; as are the "arboreal" Kombai and the "kind" tribesman outside the pacification zone. The natives' treatment was multidimesional and intersectional because they were perceived differently based on their sex or their religion. And finally, the story of the Kombai can only be told by them, and I think they did a fine job of letting their actions speak for what kind of people they were (in stark relief to Barabas' insistence that they were violent, cannibalistic headhunters)
Finally, Mr. Barabas' white privilege was evident not just in his arrogance that his cultural standard was the one to be lived up to, but also in his ability to negotiate laws, obtaining those permits and "special stamps", that the very tribesman that helped him could never hope to.

43:45

Extreme Railway Journeys S03E05 On the Xmas Express

In this special Christmas edition of his train-based travelogue series, Chris Tarrant head...

Extreme Railway Journeys S03E05 On the Xmas Express

In this special Christmas edition of his train-based travelogue series, Chris Tarrant heads across Scandinavia on an epic journey from the beautiful southern fjords to Europe's most northerly passenger station at Narvik, where British warships won a famous victory during the Second World War, while also squeezing in a chat with a certain white-bearded gentleman. This is series 3 episode 5.

Gran Canaria (Spain) Vacation Travel Video Guide

Vacation travel video about destination Gran Canaria in Spain
--------------
Watch more travel videos ► https://goo.gl/MXPgSs
Join us. Subscribe now! ► https://goo.gl/awdDrh
Be our fan on Facebook ► http://goo.gl/0xmbQk
Follow us on Twitter ► http://goo.gl/334ln5
--------------
Thanks for all your support, rating the video and leaving a comment is always appreciated!
Please: respect each other in the comments.
Expoza Travel is taking you on a journey to the earth's most beautiful and fascinating places. Get inspiration and essentials with our travel guide videos and documentaries for your next trip, holiday, vacation or simply enjoy and get tips about all the beauty in the world...
It is yours to discover!

㋡ Ultra low cost budget adventure trip riding aro...

Extreme Trains S01E03 High speed train...

It turns out that a theory explaining how we might detect parallel universes and prediction for the end of the world was proposed and completed by physicist Stephen Hawking shortly before he died ... &nbsp;. According to reports, the work predicts that the universe would eventually end when stars run out of energy ... ....

In another blow to the Trump administration Monday, the US Supreme Court decided Arizona must continue to issue state driver’s licenses to so-called Dreamer immigrants and refused to hear an effort by the state to challenge the Obama-era program that protects hundreds of thousands of young adults brought into the country illegally as children, Reuters reported ... – WN.com. Jack Durschlag....

Uber announced on Monday that it was pulling all of its self-driving cars from public roads in Arizona and San Francisco, Toronto, and Pittsburgh after a female pedestrian was reportedly killed after being struck by an autonomous Uber vehicle in Tempe, according to The Verge.&nbsp; ... “We are fully cooperating with local authorities in their investigation of this incident.” ... "Some incredibly sad news out of Arizona....

An explosion on Sunday night in Austin shared "similarities" with three bombs that went off in the Texas capital earlier this month and authorities were warning on Monday that they are dealing with a serial bomber who is targeting the city, according to the Washington Post... “So we’ve definitely seen a change in the method that this suspect … is using.” ... “And we assure you that we are listening ... -WN.com, Maureen Foody....

A panel of federal judges dismissed the Republican lawsuit challenging a new congressional map that was imposed by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, ending one of two challenges to the map on Monday, according to The Inquirer. The judge's decision said that the Republican lawmakers who brought the challenge did not have legal standing to do so and that the case is inappropriate for the court to take up at this time ...ChiefU.S....

search tools

You can search using any combination of the items listed below.

UNITED NATIONS — Women and girls in the Democratic Republic of the Congo face rampant rape and sexual exploitation, deadly violence and coercion into human trafficking rings as humanitarian conditions in the country deteriorate, UN officials and experts said Monday ... organization in eastern Congo, who testified before the Security Council....

President of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Joseph Kabila, seen here holding a press conference for the first time in five years on January 26, 2018 in Kinshasa, refused to leave office when his term expired in December 2016. A government crackdown on demonstrations against President Joseph Kabila in Democratic Republic of Congo has led to the killing of 47 people in just over a year, a UN report seen by AFP said Monday....

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - Humanitarian needs caused by conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo have doubled over the last year and a cash shortage is the "largest single impediment" for a proper response, the humanitarian chief at the United Nations said on Monday ... ....

GENEVA/KINSHASA (19 March 2018) – The right to freedom of peaceful assembly was severely restricted and often violently suppressed in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 2017 and the trend continues so far this year, according to a UN report ... ....

Humanitarian Aid. The humanitarian crisis and the resulting suffering will only worsen in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) if persistent violence is not brought under control and there is no political transition, the top United Nations relief official warned on Monday ... “This is Mwasi Kallunga and her seven children, including her 18-month-old baby ... Related news.. ■ DR Congo ... ‘There is despair, but there is also hope’ ... Home page ....

Mining companies in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) won’t secure substantial concessions in talks with the state about changes to the industry code, a senior mining official said ... The modifications will raise taxes and other costs for miners in Congo, Africa’s top copper producer and the world’s main source of cobalt ... ....

International donors will meet next month in Geneva to address the growing humanitarian disaster in the Democratic Republic of Congo and the lack of funding for 13 million people in dire need ... Eastern Congo is experiencing a surge in violence in several provinces caused by armed groups and inter-communal fighting. Repeated delays in holding the ......